Tokaimura nuclear accidents

(Redirected from Hisashi Ouchi)

The Tokaimura nuclear accidents refer to two nuclear related incidents near the village of Tōkai, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. The first accident occurred on 11 March 1997, producing an explosion after an experimental batch of solidified nuclear waste caught fire at the Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel Development Corporation (PNC) radioactive waste bituminisation facility. Over twenty people were exposed to radiation.

Tokai Nuclear Plant, Japan's first nuclear power station

The second was a criticality accident at a separate fuel reprocessing facility belonging to Japan Nuclear Fuel Conversion Co. (JCO) on 30 September 1999 due to improper handling of liquid uranium fuel for an experimental reactor.[1] The incident spanned approximately 20 hours and resulted in radiation exposure for 667 people and the deaths of two workers.[2] Most of the technicians had to go to hospital with serious injuries.[3]

It was determined that the accidents were due to inadequate regulatory oversight, lack of appropriate safety culture and inadequate worker training and qualification.[4] After these two accidents, a series of lawsuits were filed and new safety measures were put into effect.

By March 2000, Japan's atomic and nuclear commissions began regular investigations of facilities, expansive education regarding proper procedures and safety culture regarding handling nuclear chemicals and waste. JCO's credentials were removed, the first Japanese plant operator to be punished by law for mishandling nuclear radiation.[5] This was followed by the company president's resignation and six officials being charged with professional negligence.

Background

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Nuclear power was an important energy alternative for natural-resource-poor Japan to limit dependence on imported energy, providing about 30% of Japan's electricity[6] up until the Fukushima nuclear disaster of 2011, after which nuclear electricity production fell into sharp decline.[7]

Tōkai's location (about 70 miles from Tokyo) and available land space made it ideal for nuclear power production, so a series of experimental nuclear reactors and then the Tōkai Nuclear Power Plant – the country's first commercial nuclear power station – were built here. Over time, dozens of companies and government institutes were established nearby to provide nuclear research, experimentation, manufacturing, and fuel fabrication, enrichment and disposal facilities. Nearly one-third of Tōkai's population rely upon nuclear industry-related employment.[8]

Said plant was built in 1988 and processed 3 tonnes of uranium per year. The uranium that was processed was enriched up to 20% U-235, a higher enrichment level than normal. They did this using a wet process.[3]

1997 nuclear waste accident

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On 11 March 1997, Tōkai's first serious nuclear incident occurred at PNC's bituminization facility. It is sometimes called the Dōnen accident (動燃事故, Dōnen jiko), 'Dōnen' being an abbreviation of PNC's full Japanese name Dōryokuro Kakunenryō Kaihatsu Jigyōdan. The site encased and solidified low-level liquid waste in molten asphalt (bitumen) for storage, and that day was trialing a new asphalt-waste mix, using 20% less asphalt than normal. A gradual chemical reaction inside one fresh barrel ignited the already-hot contents at 10:00 a.m. and quickly spread to several others nearby. Workers failed to properly extinguish the fire, and smoke and radiation alarms forced all personnel to evacuate the building. At 8 p.m., just as people were preparing to reenter the building, built up flammable gases ignited and exploded, breaking windows and doors, which allowed smoke and radiation to escape into the surrounding area.

The incident exposed 37 nearby personnel to trace amounts of radiation in what the government's Science and Technology Agency declared the country's worst-yet nuclear accident, which was rated a 3 on the International Nuclear Event Scale. A week after the event, meteorological officials detected unusually high levels of cesium 40 km (25 miles) southwest of the plant.[9] Aerial views over the nuclear processing plant building showed a damaged roof from the fire and explosion allowing continued external radiation exposure.

PNC management mandated two workers to falsely report the chronological events leading to the facility evacuation in order to cover-up lack of proper supervision.[10] Dōnen leadership failed to immediately report the fire to the Science and Technology Agency (STA). This delay was due to their own internal investigation of the fire causing hampered immediate emergency response teams and prolonged radioactivity exposure. Dōnen facility officials initially reported a 20% increase of radiation levels in the area surrounding the reprocessing plant, but later revealed the true percent was ten times higher than initially published.[11] Tōkai residents demanded criminal prosecution of PNC officials, reorganization of company leadership and closure of the plant itself.[10] Following public outcry, the facility closed until reopening in November 2000 when it was reinstated as a nuclear fuel reprocessing plant.[12]

Later, Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto criticized the delay that allowed radiation to continue to impact local areas.[13]

1999 accident

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Tokaimura nuclear accidents
 
 
Tōkai-mura
Location of Tōkai-mura in Japan
Date30 September 1999
LocationTōkai, Ibaraki, Japan
Coordinates36°28′47″N 140°33′13″E / 36.47972°N 140.55361°E / 36.47972; 140.55361
TypeNuclear criticality accident
CauseUncontrolled nuclear fission after uranyl nitrate overload
OutcomeINES Level 4 (accident with local consequences)
Deaths2
Non-fatal injuries667 contaminated
InquiriesWorld Nuclear Association

The second, more serious Tōkai nuclear accident (Japanese: 東海村JCO臨界事故, romanizedTōkai-mura JCO-rinkai-jiko) occurred about four miles away from the PNC facility on 30 September 1999, at a fuel enrichment plant operated by JCO, a subsidiary of Sumitomo Metal Mining Company. It was the worst civilian nuclear radiation accident in Japan prior to Fukushima (2011).[11] The incident exposed the surrounding population to hazardous radiation after the uranium mixture reached criticality. Two of the three technicians mixing fuel were killed. The incident was caused by lack of regulatory supervision, inadequate safety culture and improper technician training and education.[14]

The first cause that contributed to the accident was the lack of regulatory oversight. The overhead failed to install a criticality accident alarm and they were not included in the National Plan for the Prevention of Nuclear Disasters.[4] Due to lack of safety technology, they had to rely on the administration to keep track of the levels which led to human error. In addition, the regulator did not conduct routine inspections that would have caught this lack of safety technology.

The second cause of the accident was the inadequate safety culture in Japan. The company did not submit the second operation of nuclear facilities to the safety management division because they knew it would not get approved. The company spokesman explained that the company's revenue was getting low and so they felt they had no choice, but to open a new factory. They knew it wouldn't get approved so they did it without telling the safety management division.[4]

The JCO facility converted uranium hexafluoride into enriched uranium dioxide fuel. This served as the first step in producing fuel rods for Japan's power plants and research reactors.[15] Enriching nuclear fuel requires precision and has the potential to impose extreme risks to technicians. If done improperly, the process of combining nuclear products can produce a fission reaction which, in turn, produces radiation.[16]: 42  In order to enrich the uranium fuel, a specific chemical purification procedure is required. The steps included feeding small batches of uranium oxide powder into a designated dissolving tank in order to produce uranyl nitrate using nitric acid.[16] Next, the mixture is carefully transported to a specially-crafted buffer tank. The buffer tank containing the combined ingredients is specially designed to prevent fission activity from reaching criticality. In a precipitation tank, ammonia is added forming a solid product. This tank is meant to capture any remaining nuclear waste contaminants. In the final process, uranium oxide is placed in the dissolving tanks until purified, without enriching the isotopes, in a wet-process technology specialized by Japan.[16]

Pressure placed upon JCO to increase efficiency led the company to employ an illegal procedure where they skipped several key steps in the enrichment procedure. The technicians poured the product by hand in stainless-steel buckets directly into a precipitation tank.[11] This process inadvertently contributed to a critical mass level incident triggering uncontrolled nuclear chain reactions over the next several hours.

Victim report

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Two of the workers were working on the tank at the time of the accident; the third was in a nearby room. All three immediately reported seeing blue-white flashes. They evacuated immediately upon hearing the gamma alarms sound. After evacuating, one of the workers that was at the tank began experiencing symptoms of irradiation.[17] The worker passed out, then regained consciousness 70 minutes later. The three workers were then transferred to the hospital, which confirmed that they were exposed to high doses of gamma, neutron, and other radiation.

In addition to these three workers who immediately felt symptoms, 56 people at the JCO plant were reported to have been exposed to the gamma, neutron, and other irradiation. In addition to the workers at the site, construction workers who were working on a job site nearby, were also reported to have been exposed.[17]

Nuclear criticality event chronology

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JCO facility technicians Hisashi Ouchi, Masato Shinohara, and Yutaka Yokokawa were speeding up the last few steps of the fuel/conversion process to meet shipping requirements. It was JCO's first batch of fuel for the Jōyō experimental fast breeder reactor in three years; no proper qualification and training requirements were established to prepare for the process.[2] To save processing time, and for convenience, the team mixed the chemicals in stainless-steel buckets. The workers followed JCO operating manual guidance in this process but were unaware it was not approved by the STA.[16] Under correct operating procedure, uranyl nitrate would be stored inside a buffer tank and gradually pumped into the precipitation tank in 2.4 kg (5.3 lb) increments.[14]

At around 10:35, the precipitation tank reached critical mass when its fill level, containing about 16 kg (35 lb) of uranium, reached criticality.[15] The hazardous level was reached after the technicians added a seventh bucket containing aqueous uranyl nitrate, enriched to 18.8% 235U, to the tank.[18] The solution added to the tank was almost seven times the legal mass limit specified by the STA.[18]

The nuclear fuel conversion standards specified in the 1996 JCO Operating Manual dictated the proper procedures regarding dissolution of uranium oxide powder in a designated dissolution tank.[19] The buffer tank's tall, narrow geometry was designed to hold the solution safely and to prevent criticality. In contrast, the precipitation tank had not been designed to hold unlimited quantities of this type of solution. The designed wide cylindrical shape made it favorable to criticality. The workers bypassed the buffer tanks entirely, opting to pour the uranyl nitrate directly into the precipitation tank. Uncontrolled nuclear fission (a self-sustaining chain reaction) began immediately, emitting intense gamma and neutron radiation.[2] At the time of the event, Ouchi had his body draped over the tank while Shinohara stood on a platform to assist in pouring the solution. Yokokawa was sitting at a desk four metres away.[16] All three technicians observed a blue flash (possibly Cherenkov radiation) and gamma radiation alarms sounded.[5] Over the next several hours the fission reaction produced continuous chain reactions.

Ouchi and Shinohara immediately experienced pain, nausea, and difficulty breathing; both workers went to the decontamination room where Ouchi vomited. Ouchi received the largest radiation exposure, resulting in rapid difficulties with mobility, coherence, and loss of consciousness.[16] Upon the point of critical mass, large amounts of high-level gamma radiation set off alarms in the building, prompting the three technicians to evacuate.[18] All three of the workers were unaware of the impact of the accident or reporting criteria. A worker in the next building became aware of the injured employees and contacted emergency medical assistance; an ambulance escorted them to the nearest hospital. The fission products contaminated the fuel reprocessing building and immediately outside the nuclear facility.[20] Emergency service workers arrived and escorted other plant workers outside of the facility's muster zones.[2]

The next morning, workers ended the chain reaction by draining water from the surrounding cooling jacket installed on the precipitation tank. The water served as a neutron reflector. A boric acid solution was added to the precipitation tank to reduce all contents to sub-critical levels; boron was selected for its neutron absorption properties.[20]

Timeline of 1999 accident
Day Time Event/action Affected parties
30 September 1999 10:35 Criticality event occurred, setting off radiation monitors and alarms; evacuation begins and employees exposed to radiation[21] 3 workers: Hisashi Ouchi, Masato Shinohara and Yutaka Yokokawa
30 September Until 23:30 (5 hours later) STA confirms continuing chain reactions; Tokaimura sets up headquarters for the incidents, (12 hours later) broadcasts all surrounding residents to evacuate, informs Japan's leadership and ceased all crop and water usage Tokaimura City and National Leadership
1 October 1999 All day Road blocks implemented; shelter in place lifted but schools closed all day; water drainage initiated to stop chain reaction. All residents
2 October 1999 All day Health checks conducted on all residents, measuring radiation; schools reopened and government press conferences held All residents

Tōkaimura evacuation

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By mid-afternoon, the plant workers and surrounding residents were asked to evacuate. Five hours after the start of criticality, evacuation began of some 161 people from 39 households within a 350-metre radius from the conversion building. Twelve hours after the incident, 300,000 surrounding residents of the nuclear facility were told to stay indoors and cease all agricultural production.[22] This restriction was lifted the next afternoon. Almost 15 days later, the facility instituted protection methods with sandbags and other shielding to protect from residual gamma radiation.

Aftermath

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Without an emergency plan or public communication from the JCO, confusion and panic followed the event.[22] Authorities warned locals not to harvest crops or drink well water.[22] To ease public concerns, officials began radiation testing of residents living about 6 miles (10 km) from the facility. Over the next 10 days, about 10,000 medical check-ups were conducted.[22] Dozens of emergency workers and residents who lived nearby were hospitalized and hundreds of thousands of others were forced to remain indoors for 24 hours. Testing confirmed 39 of the workers were exposed to the radiation.[20] At least 667 workers, first-responders, and nearby residents were exposed to excess radiation as a result of the accident.[14] Radioactive gas levels stayed high in the area even after the plant was sealed. Finally, on October 12, it was discovered that a roof ventilation fan had been left on and it was shut down.[23] Sometime after the incident, people in the area were asked to lend any gold they had to allow calculations of the size and range of the gamma ray burst.[24]

Ultimately the incident was classified as an "irradiation" not "contamination" accident under Level 4 on the Nuclear Event Scale.[2] This determination labeled the situation low risk outside of the facility.[2] The technicians and workers in the facility were measured for radiation contamination. The three technicians measured significantly higher levels of radiation than the measurement designated the maximum allowable dose (50 mSv) for Japanese nuclear workers.[20] Many employees of the company and local population suffered accidental radiation exposure exceeding safe levels. Over fifty plant workers tested up to 23 mSv and local residents up to 15 mSv.[2] The incident was fatal to the two technicians, Ouchi and Shinohara.

Environmental impact

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STA and Ibaraki Prefecture began monitoring the levels of gamma immediately after they were notified of the accident. They collected samples of tap water, well water and precipitation within 10 kilometres of the site. They also took samples of vegetation, sea water, dairy products and sea products for testing.[17] They found low levels of radioactivity in some of the vegetation, but they did not find any in the dairy products, water or sea.

Impact on technicians

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According to the radiation testing by the STA, Ouchi was exposed to 17 Sv of radiation, Shinohara 10 Sv, and Yokokawa received 3 Sv.[22][25] The two technicians who received the higher doses, Ouchi and Shinohara, died several months later.

Hisashi Ouchi, 35, was transported and treated at the University of Tokyo Hospital for 83 days.[26] Ouchi suffered serious radiation burns to most of his body, had severe damage to his internal organs, and had a near-zero white blood cell count. Without a functioning immune system, Ouchi was vulnerable to hospital-acquired infection and was placed in a special radiation ward to limit the risk of infection.[27] A micrograph of his chromosomes showed that none of them were identifiable.[28] Doctors tried to restore some functionality to Ouchi's immune system by administering peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, which at the time was a new form of treatment.[14]

After receiving the transplant from his sister, Ouchi initially experienced increased white blood cell counts temporarily, but he began to succumb to his other injuries soon thereafter.[26] Many other interventions were conducted in an attempt to arrest further decline of his badly damaged body, including repeated use of cultured skin grafts and pharmacological interventions with painkillers, broad-spectrum antibiotics and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, without any measurable success.[14] Although small areas of Ouchi's skin and mucus membranes recovered with treatment, his overall condition continued to deteriorate, and the medical personnel caring for him privately doubted whether treatment should be continued due to the lack of effectiveness and out of concern for the pain Ouchi was experiencing.[28]

Two months after the accident, Ouchi's heart stopped; although he was revived, he became unresponsive. At the wishes of his family, doctors continued to treat him, even though it had become clear that the radiation damage to his body was too extensive to be survived. On December 19th, the doctors explained to his family the seriousness of his condition and suggested that Ouchi should not be resuscitated again, and the family agreed to a do-not-resuscitate order.[28] His wife had hoped that Ouchi would at least survive until 1 January, since it was the arrival of the 2000s. But his condition deteriorated into multiple organ failure, and he died on 21 December 1999 following another cardiac arrest.[29][30]

Masato Shinohara, 40, was transported to the same facility where he died on 27 April 2000 of multiple organ failure. He endured radical cancer treatment, numerous successful skin grafts, and a transfusion from congealed umbilical cord blood (to boost stem cell count). Despite surviving for seven months, he was eventually unable to fight off radiation-exacerbated infections and internal bleeding, and succumbed to fatal lung and kidney failure.

Their supervisor, Yutaka Yokokawa, 54, received treatment from the National Institute of Radiological Sciences (NIRS) in Chiba, Japan. He was released three months later with minor radiation sickness. He faced negligence charges in October 2000.[31]

Contributors to both accidents

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According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, the cause of the accidents were "human error and serious breaches of safety principles".[20] Several human errors caused the incident, including careless material handling procedures, inexperienced technicians, inadequate supervision and obsolete safety procedures on the operating floor.[14] The company had not had any incidents for over 15 years making company employees complacent in their daily responsibilities.

The 1999 incident resulted from poor management of operation manuals, failure to qualify technicians and engineers, and improper procedures associated with handling nuclear chemicals. The lack of communication between the engineers and workers contributed to lack of reporting when the incident arose.[16] Had the company corrected the errors after the 1997 incident, the 1999 incident would have been considerably less devastating or may not have happened.

Comments within the 2012 Report by the National Diet of Japan Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission notice regulatory and nuclear industry overconfidence, and governance failures may equally apply to the Tokaimura nuclear accident.

Victim compensation and plant closure

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Over 600 plant workers, firefighters, emergency personnel and local residents were exposed to radioactivity following the incident.[22] In October 1999, JCO set up advisory booths to process compensation claims and inquiries of those affected.[22] By July 2000, over 7,000 compensation claims were filed and settled. In September 2000 JCO agreed to pay $121 million in compensation to settle 6,875 claims from people exposed to radiation and affected agricultural and service businesses.[21] All residents within 350 metres of the incident and those forced to evacuate received compensation if they agreed to not sue the company in the future.[22]

In late March 2000, the STA cancelled JCO's credentials for operation serving as the first Japanese plant operator to be punished by law for mishandling nuclear radiation.[5] This suit was followed by the company president's resignation. In October, six officials from JCO were charged with professional negligence derived from failure to properly train technicians and knowingly subverting safety procedures.[29]

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In April 2001, six employees, including the chief of production department at the time, pleaded guilty to a charge of negligence resulting in death.[21] Among those arrested was Yokokawa for his failure to supervise proper procedures.[5] The JCO President also pleaded guilty on behalf of the company.[21] During the trial, the jury learned that a 1995 JCO safety committee had approved the use of steel buckets in the procedure. Furthermore, a widely distributed but unauthorized 1996 manual recommended the use of buckets in making the solution. A STA report indicated JCO management had permitted these hazardous practices beginning in 1993 to shortcut the conversion process, even though it was contrary to approved nuclear chemical handling procedures.[14]

As a response to the incidents, special laws were put in place stipulating operational safety procedures and quarterly inspection requirements.[14] These inspections focused on the proper conduct of workers and leadership. This change mandated both safety education and quality assurance of all facilities and activities associated with nuclear power generation. Starting in 2000, Japan's atomic and nuclear commissions began regular investigations of facilities, expansive education regarding proper procedures and safety culture regarding handling nuclear chemicals and waste.[14]

Efforts to comply with emergency preparedness procedures and international guideline requirements continued. New systems were put in place for handling a similar incident with governing legislature and institutions in an effort to prevent further situations from occurring.[14]

Japan imports 80% of its energy; so mounting pressures to produce self-sustaining energy sources remain. In 2014, Japan's government decided to establish the "Strategic Energy Plan" naming nuclear as an important power source that can safely stabilize and produce the energy supply and demand of the country.[6] This event contributed to antinuclear activist movements against nuclear power in Japan.[2] To this day, the tensions between the need for produced power outside of nonexistent natural resources and the safety of the country's population remain. Advocacy for acute nuclear disease victims and eradication of nuclear related incidents has led to several movements across the globe promoting human welfare and environmental conservation.[32][failed verification]

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The 1999 accident is mentioned, along with a flashback scene of a hospital visit to Hisashi Ouchi, in the 2023 Japanese miniseries The Days, a dramatization of the Fukushima nuclear accident.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Tokaimura Criticality Accident 1999 - World Nuclear Association". www.world-nuclear.org. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Tokaimura Criticality Accident - World Nuclear Association". world-nuclear.org. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Tokaimura Criticality Accident - World Nuclear Association". world-nuclear.org. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b c "NRC Review of the Tokai-Mura Criticality Accident" (PDF). Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 2000. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d Ryan, Michael (June 2001). "The Tokaimura Accident: Nuclear Energy and Reactor Safety" (PDF). National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science: 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2019 – via Science Cases.
  6. ^ a b "Why is Nuclear Energy Necessary in Japan? – The Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan (FEPC)". www.fepc.or.jp. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  7. ^ "Japan: Nuclear share of electricity generation".
  8. ^ "Nuclear Workers Appeared Unaware of Dangers". Los Angeles Times. 7 October 1999. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  9. ^ "#468 – March 14, 1997". www.wiseinternational.org. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  10. ^ a b Heenan, Patrick (2014). The Japan Handbook: Regional Handbooks of Economic Development. Routledge. p. 56. ISBN 9781135925338.
  11. ^ a b c Iovino, Peter Aldhous and Zena. "Japan's record of nuclear cover-ups and accidents". New Scientist. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  12. ^ "Tokai nuclear fuel plant reopens after 1997 fire". The Japan Times. 21 November 2000. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  13. ^ "Explosion at PNC Tokai reprocessing plant | Wise International". www.wiseinternational.org. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Akashi, M.; Aoki, H.; Endo, A.; Fujimoto, K.; Homma, T.; Kukita, Y.; Matsubara, J.; Mennerdahl, D.; Nariai, H.; Sumita, K.; Tanabe, F.; Tanaka, S.; Yamaguchi, Y.; Zombori, P. "Lessons learned from the JCO Nuclear Criticality Accident in Japan in 1999" (PDF). International Atomic Energy Agency. International Atomic Energy Agency. Retrieved 17 January 2023. The Management System or the system required to assure not only the quality of the product but also to assure the safety as a part of "satisfaction of interested parties", had not taken root in JCO. The licensed design of the nuclear fuel process had been continuously revised in an unauthorized manner, and finally made vulnerable to the occurrence of a criticality event. Not only the three workers, who triggered the accident, but also the manager who allowed the last modification of the process lacked practical understanding of criticality safety.
  15. ^ a b "The Tokaimura Incident". large.stanford.edu. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Ryan, Michael (1 September 2001). "The Tokaimura Nuclear Accident: A Tragedy of Human Errors". Journal of College Science Teaching. 31: 43 – via Amazon.
  17. ^ a b c "Japan criticality accident - the accident at Tokaimura and its aftermath" (PDF). nationalrep.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 April 2023.
  18. ^ a b c Ryan, Michael (25 June 2001). "The Tokaimura Accident: Nuclear Energy and Reactor Safety" (PDF). National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science: 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2019.
  19. ^ Akashi, M.; Aoki, H.; Endo, A.; Fujimoto, K.; Homma, T.; Kukita, Y.; Zombori, P. (2000). "Lessons Learned From the JCO Nuclear Criticality Accident in Japan in 1999" (PDF). www-ns.iaea.org. International Atomic Energy Agency.
  20. ^ a b c d e IAEA. (1999). Report on the preliminary fact finding mission following the accident at the nuclear fuel processing facility in Tokaimura, Japan (1st ed., Vol. 1, pp. 32–34). Vienna.
  21. ^ a b c d Smith, Sandy (24 April 2001). "JCO employees plead guilty to negligence in deaths at Japanese nuclear facility". Safety Online. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h Ryan, Michael (1 November 2001). "The Tokaimura Nuclear Accident: A Tragedy of Human Errors". Journal of College Science Teaching. 31: 45 – via Amazon.
  23. ^ Levi, Barbara Goss (1999). "What Happened at Tokaimura?". Physics Today. 52 (12): 52–54. Bibcode:1999PhT....52l..52L. doi:10.1063/1.882905.
  24. ^ Efron, Sonni (8 October 1999). "Scientists Fear Wider Risk in Japan Accident". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  25. ^ Lamar, Joe (9 October 1999). "Japan's worst nuclear accident leaves two fighting for life". BMJ: British Medical Journal. 319 (7215): 937. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7215.937a. ISSN 0959-8138. PMC 1116790. PMID 10514143.
  26. ^ a b Ryan, Michael (25 June 2001). "The Tokaimura Nuclear Accident: A Tragedy of Human Errors". Journal of College Science Teaching. 1: 44 – via Amazon.
  27. ^ Street Journal, Peter LandersStaff Reporter of The Wall (1 October 1999). "Nuclear Accident in Tokai Is Among Japan's Worst". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
  28. ^ a b c Nihon Hōsō Kyōkai, ed. (2008). A slow death: 83 days of radiation sickness. Translated by Harada, Maho (1st ed.). New York: Vertical, Inc. ISBN 978-1-934287-40-8. OCLC 231583723.
  29. ^ a b "Japanese Nuclear Accident Timeline of Events". www.isis-online.org. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  30. ^ "日本東海村核泄漏 男廠工受核輻射 83天內急速潰爛畫面極震撼". 20 June 2021.
  31. ^ Lies, Elaine (11 October 2000). "Arrests Over Japan's Nuclear Accident". ABC News. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  32. ^ Eiko Maruko Siniawer. Consuming Postwar Japan. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2018[ISBN missing][page needed]
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