Mar 17 2011
NY Times: High Radiation Severely Hinders Emergency Work to Cool Japan Plant
By NORIMITSU ONISHI, DAVID E. SANGER and MATTHEW L. WALD
Published: March 17, 2011
TOKYO — Amid widening alarm in the United States and elsewhere about Japan’s nuclear crisis, military fire trucks began spraying cooling water on spent fuel rods at the country’s stricken nuclear power station late Thursday after earlier efforts to cool the rods failed, Japanese officials said.
The development came as the authorities reached for ever more desperate and unconventional methods to cool damaged reactors, deploying helicopters and water cannons in a race to prevent perilous overheating in the spent rods of the No. 3 reactor.
Moments before the military began spraying, police officers in water cannon trucks were forced back by high levels of radiation in the same area. The police had been trying to get within 50 yards of the reactor, one of six at the plant.
The five specially fitted military trucks sprayed water for an hour, but the full impact of the tactic was not immediately clear.
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