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After the meltdown: visualising Fukushima as a graphic tale

After the meltdown, the unfolding drama is told graphically in a Post exclusive

Reading Time:4 minutes
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Fighting the impending meltdowns, the workers inside the stricken plant had to improvise. Photo: SCMP Pictures

Five years on, the people of Fukushima still live in the shadow of a disaster. Nearly 100,000 people still can’t go home to pick up the pieces.

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After the magnitude 9.0 Tohoku Earthquake triggered an automatic shut down of Japan’s 54 nuclear reactors, just two are online.

Less than an hour after Japan shook, a 14 metre high black wave arrived off the northeast coast and washed away or buried nearly 20,000 lives.

And it left an ongoing radioactive legacy, Fukushima Daiichi’s triple meltdown and hydrogen gas explosions sent plumes of radioactive particles into the air and sea. Areas to the northwest are deemed unlikely to be habitable and some completely out of bounds.

The waste will measure in the millions of tonnes, it would fill a fleet of the world’s largest container ships.

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A report for the Japanese Diet said “collusion” between regulators and the operator Tokyo Electric Power Company that allowed lax enforcement turned a natural disaster into a “man-made” one.

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