U.S. sub leaked radioactive water, possibly for months

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #1

    U.S. sub leaked radioactive water, possibly for months

    http://edition.cnn.com/2008/US/08/01/na ... =hpmostpop

    U.S. sub leaked radioactive water, possibly for months

    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Water with trace amounts of radioactivity may have leaked for months from a U.S. Navy nuclear-powered submarine as it traveled around the Pacific to ports in Guam, Japan and Hawaii, Navy officials told CNN on Friday.

    The USS Houston arrives in Pearl Harbor for routine maintenance, during which the leak was found.

    The leak was found on the USS Houston, a Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine, after it went to Hawaii for routine maintenance last month, Navy officials said.
    Navy officials said the amount of radiation leaked into the water was virtually undetectable. But the Navy alerted the Japanese government because the submarine had been docked in Japan.

    The problem was discovered last month when a build-up of leaking water popped a covered valve and poured onto a sailor's leg while the submarine was in dry dock.

    An investigation found a valve was slowly dripping water from the sub's nuclear power plant. The water had not been in direct contact with the nuclear reactor, Navy officials said.

    Officials with knowledge of the incident could not quantify the amount of radiation leaked but insisted it was "negligible" and an "extremely low level." The total amount leaked while the sub was in port in Guam, Japan and Hawaii was less than a half of a microcurie (0.0000005 curies), or less than what is found in a 50-pound bag of lawn and garden fertilizer, the officials said.

    The sailor who was doused, a Houston crew member, tested negative for radiation from the water, according to Navy officials.

    Since March, the Houston had crisscrossed the western Pacific, spending a week in Japan and several weeks in both Guam and Hawaii, Navy officials said.
    The Navy on Friday notified the Japanese government of the leak, the officials said, and told them it was possible the ship had been leaking while in port in Sasebo, Japan, in March.

    While Japan has agreed to allow U.S. nuclear-powered ships in Japanese ports, the decision was a not popular in Japan.

    The Houston incident comes at a time when the Navy is trying to smooth over a problem with a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.

    The USS George Washington was due to replace the aging, conventionally powered USS Kitty Hawk this summer as the United States' sole carrier based in Japan.

    While en route to Japan this May, a massive fire broke out on the George Washington, causing $70 million in damage. The fire was blamed on crew members smoking near improperly stored flammable materials.

    There was no damage or threat to the nuclear reactor, but the ship was diverted to San Diego, California, for repairs. It now is expected to arrive in Japan at the end of September.


    The Navy this week fired the captain and his deputy, saying an investigation into the fire led to a lack of confidence in the leadership of both men.
    Just two weeks ago, thousands of Japanese protested the pending arrival of the George Washington.
  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #2
    http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jZwf ... wD92DGRFO1

    US tells Japan

    http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jZwf ... wD92DGRFO1

    US tells Japan sub leaked radiation over 2 years
    By MARI YAMAGUCHI – 2 hours ago

    TOKYO (AP) — An American nuclear-powered submarine leaked radiation for more than two years and may have affected three Japanese ports where it stopped more extensively than initially thought, Japanese officials said Thursday, releasing a U.S. report.

    On Aug. 1, the U.S. Navy notified Japan that the USS Houston had leaked water containing small amounts of radiation during three calls to the southern Japanese ports of Sasebo and Okinawa in March and April this year but caused no threat to people or the environment. The submarine also made stops in Guam and Pearl Harbor.

    A new U.S. Embassy report released by the Japanese Foreign Ministry Thursday said the submarine was already leaking during nine earlier port calls in Japan and the amount of radiation leaked was larger than initially reported. It "has been steadily leaking a small amount" of radiation from June 2006 to July 2008 when it entered a drydock in Hawaii, the U.S. report said. It said the total leakage was still negligible.

    The radiation leak has caused a stir in Japan where the continued presence of the U.S. military and its nuclear vessels draw complaints from residents about crime, noise and pollution linked to some 50,000 American servicemen based in the country. The presence of nuclear submarines is particularly sensitive, given that Japan is the only country the U.S. ever used atomic bombs against in the closing days of World War II.

    "If we add all radiation leaked at every Japanese port, it would be still smaller than the amount of naturally occurring radioactivity found inside home smoke detectors," the Japanese foreign ministry said in a statement accompanying its release of the U.S. report. "Japan also has found no abnormality in its monitoring results during Houston's port calls since June 2006."

    U.S. Embassy officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

    The USS Houston made three previously undisclosed calls at Sasebo in July 2006, February and April in 2007. The vessel was also leaking during its two port calls in Yokosuka, a large U.S. naval port near Tokyo, in 2007, and four calls in Okinawa in 2007, according to the embassy report.

    News of the incident also comes just weeks ahead of the arrival of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington to be based in Yokosuka, just south of Tokyo.

    The carrier's arrival, originally set for August under a Japan-U.S. security alliance, was delayed until late September because of a fire aboard the vessel in May, another incident that has caused safety concerns in Japan.

    Comment

    • raalst
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 1229

      #3
      would *that* be what those

      would *that* be what those strange sensors on the newer russian boats
      are sniffing ? I wonder....

      Comment

      • Rogue Sub
        Junior Member
        • Jul 2006
        • 1724

        #4
        You know you get a

        You know you get a bigger rad dose from eating a few bananas!

        Comment

        • u-5075
          Junior Member
          • Feb 2003
          • 1134

          #5
          http://www.navytimes.com/news/2008/08/k ... ak_082008/

          City petitions to

          http://www.navytimes.com/news/2008/08/k ... ak_082008/

          City petitions to know cause of nuke sub leak


          Kyodo News Agency
          Posted : Thursday Aug 21, 2008 13:24:53 EDT
          NAGASAKI, Japan — The Sasebo city assembly unanimously passed a petition Thursday calling on the central government to urge the U.S. to clarify what caused a minute radiation leak from one of its nuclear-powered submarines at Sasebo port.
          The petition also asks the central government to urge the United States to come up with steps to ensure no similar incident is repeated.

          It also demands that the submarine Houston, which experienced the leak, and other U.S. nuclear-powered vessels not be readily granted port calls in Sasebo unless safety, monitoring and disaster preparedness measures are established.

          A U.S. naval base is located in Sasebo.

          The southwestern Japan city earlier expressed its opposition to the Houston’s entry to the port, after the revelation earlier this month that the submarine leaked water with trace amounts of radioactivity when it visited in March.

          In the petition, the assembly presses Tokyo to urge the U.S. military to take part in the city’s nuclear disaster preparedness drills, noting that the military has stayed away from them.

          The municipal lawmakers are calling for the immediate installation of radiation monitoring posts in the southern part of the port, where U.S. submarines are typically berthed.

          Some municipal lawmakers are set to visit Tokyo in early September to hand copies of the petition to the Foreign Ministry and the Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Ministry.

          The petition will also be sent to Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, House of Representatives Speaker Yohei Kono and House of Councillors President Satsuki Eda, they said.

          Comment

          • u-5075
            Junior Member
            • Feb 2003
            • 1134

            #6
            http://www.military.com/news/article/us ... 6032310810

            US Ends Probe

            http://www.military.com/news/article/us ... 6032310810

            US Ends Probe of Nuke Sub in Japan
            August 30, 2008
            Associated Press

            TOKYO - Japan has received a final U.S. report concluding that small amounts of radiation escaped from a faulty valve on an American nuclear-powered submarine during Japanese port visits but posed no health or environmental threat, the Foreign Ministry said.

            The U.S. Navy disclosed in early August that the USS Houston had leaked water containing radiation during several calls to Sasebo and Okinawa in southern Japan and Yokosuka near Tokyo between July 2006 and April 2008.

            U.S. Deputy Chief of Mission James P. Zumwalt submitted the report Friday, saying the Navy investigation concluded that the leakage in the three ports totaled 0.6 micro curies, or less than one-millionth of a curie, which posed no danger to Japan, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement obtained Saturday. The ministry provided a copy of the report.

            "The trace levels of radioactivity would have no adverse effect on human health, marine life, or the environment," the U.S. report said. "The radiation exposure dose would be less than that received from a routine chest X-ray."

            The report said the U.S. Navy was improving the valve's quality before sending the submarine back into operation.

            It said the Navy, after reviewing records dating back to 2004, concluded that "the valve had been steadily leaking" from June 2006 until the submarine entered dry dock in July, when the problem was discovered for the first time. About a gallon of water spilled onto a crew member on July 17 when a fitting came loose. The report also said no similar leakage had occurred in the past 50 years.

            U.S. officials were not available for comment Saturday.

            The incident has caused a stir in Japan weeks ahead of the arrival of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington, to be permanently based in Yokosuka, near Tokyo. The George Washington is to arrive in late September after a fire aboard the vessel in May delayed its departure - another incident that irked many Japanese.

            The presence of nuclear submarines is particularly sensitive in Japan, the only country to have been attacked by U.S. atomic bombs in the closing days of World War II.

            The Navy has said the Houston also released tiny amounts of radiation in Guam, Pearl Harbor, and during port visits in Singapore, Port Kelang, Malaysia and Saipan.

            Comment

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