It is a little mind-blowing in terms of the ongoing disaster in the Fukushima Daiichi plant. But in a different part of Japan, tsunami survivors living in their local nuclear power plant.
The Onagawa nuclear power station was built 30-ft. The tsunami waves cope with. (Fukushima, only 18 ft.) (Waves was developed.) After the tsunami destroyed much of the city, made the way for the power plant, in search of protection some of the people, who survived. Weeks of later life 240 of them are still there, according to the associated press. The AP describes these people as sleep and play "in addition to the reactors", but it also says that the refugees in the power plant is accommodated employee gym are. I suspect that "next to" - and the resulting mental image of a bunch of huddled masses snuggled up against a ship containment - is misleading.
The Onagawa plant is one of several nuclear power plants, the smaller damage after the earthquake and tsunami suffered. But the problems here much, much smaller than in Fukushima and operators could get the reactors in cold shutdown pretty quickly. Currently is in shutdown mode.
The company, which owns the power station - Tohoku electric power co., runs another company as the Fukushima Daiichi - still the plant keeps pretty locked. The gates are not wide open for anyone. Only employees and the refugees living there are one and allowed. So all the descriptions of life within the AP come from interviews with those who did while they were away from the power station site.
From the sounds of things, life in the power plant is much nicer than in other refugee camps in Onagawa. People living in contrast to other locations report at the power plant, the access to electricity (the availability of which is Onagawa a refugee camp and Fukushima is a disaster zone.) (Onagawa used also diesel generators, but they were not damaged), as well as dedicated clean toilets and the Tohoku electric power company's telephone network.
Image: Nekosuki600 of CC
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