The nuclear and industrial safety agency confirms the crisis level has been raised from five to seven on the international nuclear and radiological event scale Japan has raised the severity level of its nuclear crisis to a maximum seven, putting the emergency at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant on a par with Chernobyl. Officials from the nuclear and industrial safety agency [Nisa] confirmed that the crisis level had been raised from five to seven on the international nuclear and radiological event [INES] scale. But they said the new rating reflects the initial impact of the nuclear crisis, adding that radiation levels have since dropped dramatically. The scale, devised by the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA], ranks nuclear and radiological accidents and incidents by severity from one to seven. Level seven incidents involve a major release of radiation with widespread health and environmental effects, according to the IAEA. In recent days Japanese officials had suggested there was no need to raise the severity level from five, which applied to the Three Mile Island accident in 1979. A spokesman for Nisa said the decision to raise the level to the status of major accident did not mean that the Japanese plant posed the same threat to public health or involved similarly big releases of radiation as the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. “Chernobyl exploded while the reactors were still active, which is completely different from the situation at Fukushima,” Hidehiko Nishiyama said. He added that the decision had been taken a month after the accident because experts needed time to analyse data. Japan’s nuclear safety commission estimated that the Fukushima plant’s reactors had released up to 10,000 terabequerels of radioactive iodine-131 into the air for several hours after they were damaged in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The emission of radioactive substances from Fukushima Daiichi was about 10% of that detected at Chernobyl, Nishiyama said. The nuclear safety commission said emissions have since dropped to below one terabecquerel per hour, adding that it was examining the total amount of radioactive materials released. Some experts criticised the move as excessive. “I think raising it to the level of Chernobyl is excessive,” said Murray Jennex, associate professor at San Diego State University. “It’s nowhere near that level. Chernobyl was terrible – it blew and they had no containment, and they were stuck. “The [Japanese] containment has been holding, the only thing that hasn’t is the fuel pool that caught fire. I don’t see those as the same event. If they want to do that, that’s fine. I think they’re being overly pessimistic.” Tuesday’s decision came after the government said it would widen the evacuation zone near the plant to include five communities lying outside the current 20-kilometre no-go area. About 70,000 people living within a 20-kilometre radius of the plant have already been evacuated, while 130,000 living between 20-30 km have been told to leave voluntarily or stay indoors. The latest evacuation, which could take at least a week to complete, was prompted by the lack of progress in fixing cooling systems at the damaged plant and concerns about the long-term effects on public health. “These new evacuation plans are meant to ensure safety against risks of living [in affected communities] for half a year or one year,” the government’s chief spokesman, Yukio Edano, said. Japan’s northeast and eastern regions have been hit by two big aftershocks in the past 24 hours. Shortly after 8am on Tuesday, an earthquake measuring magnitude 6.3 that struck off the coast of Chiba prefecture was followed by reports of a fire breaking out at the No 4 reactor at Fukushima Daichi. The blaze was quickly extinguished, officials said. The tremor was one of more than 400 aftershocks above magnitude 5 to have hit the area since March 11. In one of the few signs of progress, the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power [Tepco], said it had stopped pumping low-level radioactive water from the reactor buildings into the sea. The controversial measure, which drew criticism from neighbouring China and South Korea, was designed to free up storage space for highly contaminated water. But engineers say they are no closer to restoring the plant’s cooling system; until they do, they will be unable to cool overheating fuel rods and stabilise the facility’s six reactors. On Monday, Tepco’s president, Masataka Shimizu, made his first visit to Fukushima prefecture since the crisis began. “I would like to deeply apologise again for causing physical and psychological hardship,” he said. The prefecture’s governor, however, refused to meet him. Japan disaster Japan Nuclear power Nuclear waste Natural disasters and extreme weather Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …MSNBC's Ed Schultz began his show Monday talking about all the jobs President Obama has created since he took office. Unfortunately, as he made the case about how terrible the Bush years were by comparison, the “Ed Show” host wrongly informed his viewers that Democrats took over in January 2009 (video follows with transcript and commentary): ED SCHULTZ: Folks, let me tell you something. I was watching Rachel’s show the other night, and the, she sent her, one of her guys out on the street to start asking some questions to people about who’s in Congress and what their names are. And it was amazing to me how little people on the street knew. Let me just tell you one thing: this is the only chart you need to know come next election. This is the only chart you need to watch. This is the only chart that matters to American families. Are we headed in the right direction? And sometimes we get lost in the 24-hour news cycle, and we don’t see the progress the country’s making. Here’s the progress right here. Here’s where the Democrats took over. Here’s the plan right there. We never saw that during the Bush years. So get your cellphones out. I want to know what you think. Tonight’s question: Who do you trust to create private-sector jobs? It is indeed funny how Schultz mocked “how little people on the street knew” about “who’s in Congress and what their names are.” After all, the date he pointed to on his chart when he claimed “Here’s where the Democrats took over” was January 2009. Hate to break it to you, Ed, but the Democrats took over both chambers of Congress in January 2007. Of course, it's understandable that Schultz doesn't want his viewers to know that the unemployment rate was 4.4 percent when the Democrats took over, or that the last budget done by a Republican Congress produced a deficit of only $160 billion. He also doesn't want folks to know that over seven million more people were employed in December 2006 as compared to today, or that there are still 2.8 million fewer workers in America than on the day Obama was inaugurated. Putting even a finer point on this, our friend Moe Lane produced an interesting chart Monday comparing some economic numbers today to four years ago that I'm sure Schultz would also like his viewers to not be aware of (h/t Weasel Zippers ): Not a pretty picture, is it? As for Schultz's claim we never saw job growth during the Bush years, I guess he was sleeping from September 2003 till June 2007 when the nation experienced 46 consecutive months of employment gains: As for Schultz's question, “Are we headed in the right direction,” the Real Clear Politics “Right Track-Wrong Track/Direction of the Country” poll average currently shows 31.4 percent saying “Right” and and 61.4 percent saying “Wrong.” But “the only chart you need to know come next election…the only chart you need to watch…the only chart that matters to American families” is the one Schultz misrepresented to his viewers Monday night. And this shill is amazed by how little people on the street know. Well, Ed, it's because five days a week, on both television and radio, you're badly misinforming them.
Continue reading …From 7.07am BST on Tuesday, the film First Orbit will track Yuri Gagarin’s space flight as it happened 50 years ago. This page will display communications between Gagarin and ground control as the mission unfolds First Orbit, a film by Christopher Riley, marks the 50th anniversary of the first manned space flight by the Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin. It uses footage of the Earth shot from the International Space Station to match Gagarin’s flight path, and original mission audio. • Read film maker Chris Riley’s introduction to the film , which was shot from the International Space Station. The British Council helped to fund First Orbit, and they are tweeting the flight live as it happened, starting from 3.30am on Tuesday morning. View a complete log of mission updates. Yuri Gagarin International Space Station Space guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Title: Down By The Seaside Artist: Led Zeppelin This is possibly my favorite Zeppelin song (off of a record that came out on the day I was born). What’s yours?.
Continue reading …On February 24 , Washington Post reporter John Wagner sympathetically covered leading Maryland Democrats (and Catholics) for crossing their hierarchy to lobby for
Continue reading …‘I ask everybody, all the parties, to avoid taking Libya into a civil war. The unity of Libya is essential’ The former Libyan foreign minister Moussa Koussa last night used his first public comments since his defection to Britain to urge all sides in the conflict to stop his country turning into “a new Somalia”. “I ask everybody, all the parties, to avoid taking Libya into a civil war,” he told the BBC in a prepared statement. “More than that, we refuse to divide Libya. The unity of Libya is essential to any solution and settlement for Libya.” Koussa, who flew to the UK on 30 March, has been staying at an undisclosed location. The BBC said the interview took place in a secret location in central London. Reading out a statement in Arabic, he said: “The solution in Libya will come from the Libyans themselves, and through discussion and democratic dialogue.” Koussa also spoke about his relationship with the UK, saying that Britons were the friends of Libya, both on an historical and personal level. “We worked together against terrorism and we succeeded. We worked together to avoid terrorism and we worked together to dismantle weapons of mass destruction. It is a great job, it is great work and it makes the world safer,” he said, in an apparent reference to matters including Libya’s decision to relinquish its weapons of mass destruction programme in return for international diplomatic rehabilitation. Seeking to explain his reasons for abandoning the Gaddafi regime after 30 years, much of which he spent as Libya’s foreign intelligence chief, he said that he had been “devoted” to his work and was certain that it involved serving the Libyan people. But he said that recent events had changed things.”That’s why I took this decision. Not because I’m waiting for anything, but because I know that what I did to resign will cause me problems, but I’m ready to make that sacrifice for the sake of my country.” He said earlier: “My country lives in a difficult time. It’s the worst. When the Libyans started to lose security and stability I decided to resign. I have no contact with the Libyan regime.” Police investigating the Lockerbie bombing interviewed Koussa last week after Scottish police made a request to the Foreign Office to meet him. He is believed to have been a senior intelligence officer at the time of the 1988 plane bombing. In 1980, Koussa was expelled from the UK. He has always denied Libya was involved in the bombing. Libya Moussa Koussa Arab and Middle East unrest Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I’m not a big fan of any Democrat going on Fox News because on a good number of their shows, they’ll just find themselves being either outnumbered or talked over, but this interview with Rep. Peter DeFazio and Neil Cavuto was an exception to that rule. I think he did a pretty good job of beating back at Cavuto’s Republican talking points about how we can’t do anything on the revenue side to take care of our deficit and that it’s important to take care of our crumbling infrastructure in America. DeFazio: Well if you draw the line and say there can be no additional revenues, and in fact we’re going to reduce revenues, you’re digging the hole deeper, and that’s what Paul Ryan’s budget does. Reduce revenues by four trillion dollars. Cavuto: How are you digging the hole, seriously sir, how are you digging the hole deeper? If you’re in a 1.5 trillion dollar hole this year and a 14 trillion dollar debt hole, collectively, you can’t possibly dig it deeper. DeFazio: Neil, I voted against extending all the tax cuts in December. If we had not extended all of the Bush tax cuts, I mean, just all of them, including those that go to middle class folks and others, that would have meant the deficit would have been $440 billion dollars smaller this year. Now, so we wouldn’t have a record deficit. Cavoto: So let’s take best case scenario. We would still be looking at a 1.1 trillion dollar deficit. We would still be looking at a $13.5 trillion dollar debt. And we would still be looking at a ten year time horizon of $43 trillion dollars in debt, so isn’t the issue, it’s not a tax problem congressman, it’s a spending problem? DeFazio: It’s both. Well, Neil, you can’t solve it on spending. If we eliminated the entire government today, we would still have a deficit this year. That means the Department of Defense and everything else that you think of as government is gone tomorrow. We open the prisons. We open the borders, you know, everything. You’d still have a deficit. So you can’t just say you’re going to cut your way there. You’ve got to deal with the revenue side too. Cavuto: No you wouldn’t. That’s not… DeFazio: It is true. $800 billion for the military and $600 billion for discretionary spending, which is the little budget we’re fighting over right now. That’s $1.4 trillion less in the deficit. Cavuto: You’re talking about providing more money, more taxes for what I think you’ll acknowledge sir is a faulty product. Why don’t we address the faulty product that’s spending beneath it, right? DeFazio: Well, there are certain things I don’t think are faulty products. Investing in the next generation’s education so we can achieve more. How about me? I’m on the transportation committee. We’re headed towards a transportation bill that will invest 40% less than the bill we passed six years ago. Cavuto: Alright. DeFazio: We had two conditions when the Republicans controlled everything that said our infrastructure is falling apart and becoming third world, we’ve got to invest in our infrastructure. Cavuto: Good ideas. We’ll look more into that. I’m not holding my breath for any follow up on that during Cavuto’s weekly show on Fox.
Continue reading …Château Margaux expert to breathe new life into historic California winery Perhaps Francis Ford Coppola made him an offer he couldn’t refuse, or perhaps wine expert Phillipe Bascaules just loves the smell of Napa Valley in the morning: either way Coppola, director of film classics such as The Godfather and Apocalypse Now has lured the prominent winemaker from Château Margaux to breathe life into his California winery. Coppola said his aim is to make the estate the finest in America for the production of Old World wines, as he announced he has also bought the historic trademark Inglenook. Bascaules takes over from Scott McLeod, who had resigned as the estate’s winemaker. Inglenook occupies an important part in the development of wine in the US. The winery was founded in California’s Napa Valley in 1879 by a Finnish sea captain, Gustave Niebaum, who established it as one of the finest in the world. Niebaum brought some of the best European grapevines to Napa. Coppola bought part of the Inglenook property in 1975 with the profits from The Godfather. He spent the next two decades adding bits to re-establish the old estate, but the trademark had eluded him until now. Coppola said the arrival of Bascaules was intended to hour the estate’s heritage and restore its legacy. He said he wanted to help with “invigorating the vineyards, planning a new state-of-the-art winemaking facility, and focusing on what it would take to achieve my goal of restoring this property into America’s greatest wine estate.” Bascaules, in the same statement, said: “I was charmed by the beauty of the estate and its unique environment. I found the tasting of 1959 Inglenook astonishing with regard to its freshness and complexity, and when I tasted some samples of the 2009 vintage, I recognized the incredible potential of this property. I understand Francis Ford Coppola’s desire to bring the quality of the wines to their fullest potential and I’m excited to explore new methods to reach this goal.” The statement continues: “Rubicon will continue to be the proprietary name of Inglenook’s flagship wine, and Bascaules, who spent the past 21 years at Château Margaux, will lead a team of talented winemaking professionals dedicated to the goal of making Rubicon the finest New World estate wine produced in the Old World style.” Bascaules served as estate director for 11 years at Château Margaux. Francis Ford Coppola Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Château Margaux expert to breathe new life into historic California winery Perhaps Francis Ford Coppola made him an offer he couldn’t refuse, or perhaps wine expert Phillipe Bascaules just loves the smell of Napa Valley in the morning: either way Coppola, director of film classics such as The Godfather and Apocalypse Now has lured the prominent winemaker from Château Margaux to breathe life into his California winery. Coppola said his aim is to make the estate the finest in America for the production of Old World wines, as he announced he has also bought the historic trademark Inglenook. Bascaules takes over from Scott McLeod, who had resigned as the estate’s winemaker. Inglenook occupies an important part in the development of wine in the US. The winery was founded in California’s Napa Valley in 1879 by a Finnish sea captain, Gustave Niebaum, who established it as one of the finest in the world. Niebaum brought some of the best European grapevines to Napa. Coppola bought part of the Inglenook property in 1975 with the profits from The Godfather. He spent the next two decades adding bits to re-establish the old estate, but the trademark had eluded him until now. Coppola said the arrival of Bascaules was intended to hour the estate’s heritage and restore its legacy. He said he wanted to help with “invigorating the vineyards, planning a new state-of-the-art winemaking facility, and focusing on what it would take to achieve my goal of restoring this property into America’s greatest wine estate.” Bascaules, in the same statement, said: “I was charmed by the beauty of the estate and its unique environment. I found the tasting of 1959 Inglenook astonishing with regard to its freshness and complexity, and when I tasted some samples of the 2009 vintage, I recognized the incredible potential of this property. I understand Francis Ford Coppola’s desire to bring the quality of the wines to their fullest potential and I’m excited to explore new methods to reach this goal.” The statement continues: “Rubicon will continue to be the proprietary name of Inglenook’s flagship wine, and Bascaules, who spent the past 21 years at Château Margaux, will lead a team of talented winemaking professionals dedicated to the goal of making Rubicon the finest New World estate wine produced in the Old World style.” Bascaules served as estate director for 11 years at Château Margaux. Francis Ford Coppola Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Château Margaux expert to breathe new life into historic California winery Perhaps Francis Ford Coppola made him an offer he couldn’t refuse, or perhaps wine expert Phillipe Bascaules just loves the smell of Napa Valley in the morning: either way Coppola, director of film classics such as The Godfather and Apocalypse Now has lured the prominent winemaker from Château Margaux to breathe life into his California winery. Coppola said his aim is to make the estate the finest in America for the production of Old World wines, as he announced he has also bought the historic trademark Inglenook. Bascaules takes over from Scott McLeod, who had resigned as the estate’s winemaker. Inglenook occupies an important part in the development of wine in the US. The winery was founded in California’s Napa Valley in 1879 by a Finnish sea captain, Gustave Niebaum, who established it as one of the finest in the world. Niebaum brought some of the best European grapevines to Napa. Coppola bought part of the Inglenook property in 1975 with the profits from The Godfather. He spent the next two decades adding bits to re-establish the old estate, but the trademark had eluded him until now. Coppola said the arrival of Bascaules was intended to hour the estate’s heritage and restore its legacy. He said he wanted to help with “invigorating the vineyards, planning a new state-of-the-art winemaking facility, and focusing on what it would take to achieve my goal of restoring this property into America’s greatest wine estate.” Bascaules, in the same statement, said: “I was charmed by the beauty of the estate and its unique environment. I found the tasting of 1959 Inglenook astonishing with regard to its freshness and complexity, and when I tasted some samples of the 2009 vintage, I recognized the incredible potential of this property. I understand Francis Ford Coppola’s desire to bring the quality of the wines to their fullest potential and I’m excited to explore new methods to reach this goal.” The statement continues: “Rubicon will continue to be the proprietary name of Inglenook’s flagship wine, and Bascaules, who spent the past 21 years at Château Margaux, will lead a team of talented winemaking professionals dedicated to the goal of making Rubicon the finest New World estate wine produced in the Old World style.” Bascaules served as estate director for 11 years at Château Margaux. Francis Ford Coppola Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
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