Inside Japan's Nuclear Meltdown (full documentary) | FRONTLINE

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @DeborahRosen99
    @DeborahRosen99 2 роки тому +3309

    These men who worked in unimaginable conditions to control the radiation and prevent a meltdown are heroes, not just to Japan but to the world. They should be honored by all as such.

    • @macalister8881
      @macalister8881 2 роки тому +47

      Prevent a meltdown there were 3 that day at fuku

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 2 роки тому +31

      They were,, I have a feeling that some,, at least some died later but the facts weren't released ... If so,, it accents their bravery imo...

    • @davidtwining4059
      @davidtwining4059 2 роки тому +12

      Thank you. You said it like I wanted to say it.

    • @slowery43
      @slowery43 2 роки тому +9

      that's some gorgeous and incredible virtue signaling as well as staitng the blatantly obvious... nice pull there Debs

    • @jasonfalcon4052
      @jasonfalcon4052 2 роки тому +1

      That’s a fact. Even the men that were part of Chernobyl suffered a horrible month of radiation. With it being 800 times stronger then the atomic bomb dropped in Japan. Although what’s so messed up we’re the engineers that passed each reactor knowing that by hitting Azid 5 was just like pulling the trigger on a nuclear bomb. From the lies that Russia tells it’s people is the main reason why they will never win this war over Ukraine. I think anyone that harms women and children will answer to God one moment in there existence.

  • @weavernutz22
    @weavernutz22 2 роки тому +1304

    I lived in Okinawa when the earthquake tsunami happened. My unit deployed the next day and started humanitarian missions immediately. It’s the only thing I did in my military career that I believe was worth it.

    • @jothain
      @jothain 2 роки тому +65

      You have my eternal gratitude for your job. These kinds of things aren't in vain.

    • @udirt
      @udirt 2 роки тому +34

      one thing is enough!

    • @misschio8559
      @misschio8559 2 роки тому +14

      You are a hero!

    • @NoticerOfficial
      @NoticerOfficial 2 роки тому +5

      Interesting…want a job in the states?

    • @garylima515
      @garylima515 2 роки тому +21

      Amen brother I was also there Onboard Uss John s McCain operation tamadachi ships Motto Fortune Favors The Brave stationed out of Yokosuka Japan. 2005-2012

  • @luckymuddypaw
    @luckymuddypaw 2 роки тому +3775

    The prime minister handled the situation incredibly well. When he realized he wasn't being told the entire truth, he went there himself. He was responsible for the entire country, he needed to know exactly what was going on, and when that wasn't happening he took it into his own hands

    • @畠野唐茄子
      @畠野唐茄子 2 роки тому +680

      Unfortunately, many Japanese believe that Prime Minister Naoto Kan is the number one cause of the nuclear accident.
      1, when he visited the nuclear power plant, he summoned and cursed local staff (including the director of the nuclear power plant) who were desperately responding to prevent a hydrogen explosion. If it weren't for this call, at least the explosion would have been avoided.
      2, he interfered with the injection of seawater into the reactor, which had begun to melt. He delayed the meeting without attending the necessary meeting and did not give permission for the necessary action. Therefore, the director had no choice but to rebel and inject it without permission.
      3, he tried to slaughter the information. For example, he did not disclose a simulation that accurately predicted how radiation would spread, saying, "Because the people are likely to be frightened," and set a wide range of concentric evacuation areas without any grounds. As a result, he was forced to evacuate far away to unrelated people. Also, when a nuclear security expert went on a tour of the nuclear power plant and learned that the administration's methods weren't working, he tried to force to arrest expert to prevent expert from appearing on TV and criticizing the government.
      4, he participated in the training assuming a Chernobyl accident-level nuclear accident the previous year as the prime minister, but in the actual accident, he ignored it and took unscrupulous measures. In Japan, there is a mechanism in which politicians who have accumulated specialized knowledge create and present the optimal plan for politicians, and politicians choose the better one from them and execute it, but he is his own at the time of the accident. Regarding nuclear power plants in the party (his party was created for the purpose of winning elections by social activists), a large number of "committees" gathering amateur politicians were formed and discussions were useless. If it worked according to the old training, the accident would have been suppressed a little more.
      In addition, their party came to power with the goal of "eliminating all nuclear power plants," but in reality the old nuclear power plants (including the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station) that were planned to be abolished for the purpose of reducing carbon dioxide. I was forced to operate it. And when the government was chased after the accident, he was attacking the current ruling party, which was the opposition party at the time, saying, "We have opposed the nuclear power plant!"
      (By the way, before the accident, he was criticized by the opposition for illegally receiving money from foreigners, but this was made irresistible by the earthquake.)
      Naoto Kan used to be a good social activist. Many Japanese think that such a tragedy would have been suppressed a little if he had not formed a Democratic Party as a politician and remained a social activist.
      (I'm sorry that the text is difficult to understand because I used Google Translate.)

    • @andycoslet6479
      @andycoslet6479 2 роки тому +170

      He handled it way better than Russia

    • @nap1215
      @nap1215 2 роки тому +49

      And now they want to dump the water to the ocean. So irresponsible

    • @畠野唐茄子
      @畠野唐茄子 2 роки тому +211

      @@nap1215 There are some misunderstandings, so I will supplement them.
      1, The government that is trying to drain treated water is not the party of Naoto and others. Naoto's political parties were so incompetent that they couldn't do anything and the people were disappointed, so they lost power in the election one year after the accident. Now Naoto and others are irresponsibly insisting, "Don't drain treated water! Oppose nuclear power plants! Cooperate with China and Russia!", Which is becoming more and more annoying to the people.
      2, The water that is about to be discharged is not "contaminated water" that cools the reactor linearly, but "treated water" that has the same radiation dose as nature by removing radioactive substances to the limit.
      Currently, a large amount of this treated water is stored in old tanks on the premises of the Fukushima nuclear power plant. However, there is no more land to prepare tanks anymore, and if the old tanks are not replaced, the treated water will overflow and mix with radioactive substances and become contaminated water again when an earthquake strikes.
      Therefore, we are now trying to carry the treated water, which has been stored for a long time, to a place farther away from the nuclear power plant (which may be contaminated again if it is close) and throw it away.

    • @douglasskaalrud6865
      @douglasskaalrud6865 2 роки тому +33

      @@nap1215 Well let’s hear your ideas on what to do with it.

  • @MichaelClark-uw7ex
    @MichaelClark-uw7ex Рік тому +363

    "I had to do it for my daughter"
    That was the most loving statement ever.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 10 місяців тому +1

      That must be what the mayor of Futaba thought as he was evacuating his family while reassuring the residents that the situation was under control.

    • @robynmeyer7796
      @robynmeyer7796 2 місяці тому

      In Japanese tradition - the local men also had a “duty” to remain. It was also an act of incredible bravery…which society would view as “immense shame and weakness”. As he had the permission of the village leader to leave this would negate his responsibility to abide by etiquette and duty…so he was offering an explanation that runs deeper than love and shows respect and patriotic honour.

    • @HitzThaDon
      @HitzThaDon 19 днів тому

      Nick Rochefort agrees

  • @piotrw3954
    @piotrw3954 3 роки тому +1717

    "He left his family" Such a crap sentence. He saved what was left of it, allowed his daughter to make a family. What the guy said was spot on - "The living are more important than the dead"

    • @artlopes9463
      @artlopes9463 3 роки тому +72

      AKA Let the dead bury the dead.

    • @Gloopling
      @Gloopling 3 роки тому +12

      @@artlopes9463 Excellently put

    • @aquariusaquarius1280
      @aquariusaquarius1280 3 роки тому +71

      Exactly! There is nothing we can do to the deceased people, their lives already stopped at that moment... but for the living ones, there is still a great life ahead of them... life must continue despite the pain and difficulties... good that he heed that advice...

    • @viennperidot1119
      @viennperidot1119 3 роки тому +73

      Yes, this.
      He prioritised the health and happiness of his living daughter over his own grief and need for closure.
      If that isn't "Dad Goals", I don't know what is.

    • @i.m.demarco2324
      @i.m.demarco2324 3 роки тому +20

      Awe, he wanted to find his baby, wife, father....
      Its so sad he never got to have a funeral for the little one....only a memorial service.
      He and his older daughter are honouring the lives of his "lost to the sea" family...
      Tragedy
      💞✌🙏

  • @moshack
    @moshack 2 роки тому +214

    I live in Tokyo Japan. I remember this day like it was yesterday. The Earthquake was horrible. I was trapped in my 2nd floor bedroom only days after returning from the hospital for a major surgery on my Cervical spine. I could hardly move. I had to ride it out as my family evacuated our house. At least they are safe I thought. Then the news of the nuclear plants melt down radiation was broadcasting on the news. We knew it was serious. I am American, but my family is Japanese. I would stay and die with my family if that was our fate. Now after many years I appreciate life more than ever. Every day is a blessing.

    • @SuperSreggin
      @SuperSreggin 10 місяців тому +2

      ok

    • @DriveLaken
      @DriveLaken 8 місяців тому +4

      How did you convince them to leave you? It was the right thing & no intention of trolling.
      It must have been an intense conversation. The most intense.

    • @SunBear69420
      @SunBear69420 7 місяців тому +4

      I wanna troll this person ​@@DriveLaken

    • @JB-yr4vd
      @JB-yr4vd 3 місяці тому

      You sound like a liar….

    • @rolandevans7299
      @rolandevans7299 2 місяці тому

      Qq

  • @Angelica_Rodriguez39
    @Angelica_Rodriguez39 3 роки тому +2739

    Those firefighters were beyond courageous. So, so much respect to them.

    • @louisoddone992
      @louisoddone992 3 роки тому +24

      The prevailing wind saved them.

    • @hugovera1540
      @hugovera1540 3 роки тому +59

      firefighters did the job when no one else did. that should have been the military

    • @StaK_1980
      @StaK_1980 3 роки тому +85

      And again, just like in Chernobyl, they sent in the firefighters instead of the engineers... infuriating.

    • @elijahmasquelier1238
      @elijahmasquelier1238 3 роки тому +83

      everyone involved here was a damn hero. they risked their lives knowing the future of their country and indeed their whole region of the world hung in the balance. firefighters in general are heroes, for proof see the forest fires in california or 9/11 or this or any other situation where they readily risk their lives for others.

    • @benquinney2
      @benquinney2 3 роки тому +7

      Bushido

  • @gotindrachenhart
    @gotindrachenhart 2 роки тому +566

    Courage doesn't mean you have no fear, it means doing what must be done despite the fear. And those firefighters and plant workers and chopper pilots were some of the most courageous people ever IMO. At times, you must simply do what is right, no matter the cost.
    Much was learned from this disaster but in the end, there is only so much we can do to keep mother nature at bay.

    • @georgeizziednu7983
      @georgeizziednu7983 Рік тому +20

      The one cannot be courageous or brave if he doenst have a sense of fear. Fearless cannot be brave

    • @gotindrachenhart
      @gotindrachenhart Рік тому +4

      @@georgeizziednu7983 exactly.

    • @garylefevers
      @garylefevers Рік тому +3

      True. My wife and I cried when we heard about those brave souls. God bless them.

    • @johnpug94
      @johnpug94 Рік тому

      Yewsszz oxoi

    • @JohnnysChingaderas
      @JohnnysChingaderas 8 місяців тому

      Remember they weren’t saving imminent lives, they knew damn well what would be the cause if it were taken care of, it really displays the selfishness these people had

  • @turhakuolla6078
    @turhakuolla6078 2 роки тому +1270

    the dad and his personal distaster broke my heart. i love how he acted in favor of his surviving daughter and appears to be such a good father in the end despite battling his own grieving and uncertainties. and the quote about looking at the sea that took their families from them ah:(( so beautifully sad

    • @carlislepanting5219
      @carlislepanting5219 2 роки тому +13

      Belize central america I'm from and i agree totally !! It made me cried a the end!! Nuclear power is dangerous

    • @volkswagenginetta
      @volkswagenginetta 2 роки тому +18

      there wasnt a good answer to that one. he had to make an impossible decision.

    • @udirt
      @udirt 2 роки тому +16

      The village major probably saved them... but the loss must be unbearable. hopefully he can always remember his love.

    • @janetmarmaro8269
      @janetmarmaro8269 2 роки тому

      When did this happen?

    • @frankverschaetzing
      @frankverschaetzing 2 роки тому +1

      @@janetmarmaro8269 11th of march 2011 (it´s in the description😉)

  • @felixthecleaner8843
    @felixthecleaner8843 3 роки тому +481

    the workers who went in to vent the reactors and the Firemen who laid hoses from the ocean to the fuel ponds were very brave men indeed.

    • @lucasgamezz140
      @lucasgamezz140 2 роки тому +39

      And it wouldn't have been neccessary for them to be brave if TEPCO used their brain when building the damn thing.

    • @ltipst2962
      @ltipst2962 Рік тому +4

      @@lucasgamezz140 we're all human and even the engineers or designers. It usually takes something drastic to create reason for drastic defense.

    • @eb924
      @eb924 Рік тому +11

      ​@@ltipst2962 nah bro they have been warned for over a litteral year that this could likely happen
      (the last response they fucking did was place a fucking door like bruh)

    • @TheClassicLamb
      @TheClassicLamb Рік тому

      Brave men, delivered to You, the viewer, first on PBS.

    • @aavvcc
      @aavvcc 5 місяців тому

      @@lucasgamezz140I don’t think Japanese laws were in place to force TEPCO to use their brains when building and operating it. I hope changes have been made since?

  • @AccidentallyOnPurpose
    @AccidentallyOnPurpose 2 роки тому +300

    The ingenuity the workers had to rig up all the car batteries long enough to get some instruments working is amazing.

    • @garybulwinkle82
      @garybulwinkle82 6 місяців тому +5

      If they're flying in the PM, why didn't they get some portable generators in there!? Surely, they have some hardware stores not damaged!!

    • @thomasjones4570
      @thomasjones4570 5 місяців тому +5

      It was the most basic of all ideas to an engineer...

    • @thomasjones4570
      @thomasjones4570 5 місяців тому +8

      @@garybulwinkle82The company was NOT telling anyone there was an emergency. By the time the PM found out, it was too late.

    • @wizzle0979
      @wizzle0979 5 місяців тому

      It's why we need to ban nuclear power generation at all costs. It simply isn't safe. Especially when we have wind and solar and geothermal.

    • @RickShangle
      @RickShangle 4 місяці тому

      Heroes. Those and so many others.
      Little scares me more than radiation.

  • @mntoaz8840
    @mntoaz8840 Рік тому +285

    I didn’t realize just how bad this could have been. I have tremendous respects for all the people involved to get the situation under control.

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Рік тому +1

      Not possible it could have been worse. Even if all workers walked away, they still would have had three melted reactors and no one would have died from radiation.

    • @groboclone
      @groboclone Рік тому +13

      @@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk If all the workers had walked away the containment vessel would have exploded and rendered one third of Japan uninhabitable

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Рік тому +2

      @@groboclone Nope, that's the beauty of the design of the containment vessels. Even Chernobyl with no containment vessel didn't make the area uninhabitable.

    • @alexpetrov8871
      @alexpetrov8871 Рік тому +8

      ​@@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Too bad you weren't there to tell them about it. It would be a great relief for everyone.

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Рік тому +1

      @@alexpetrov8871 They could look up the information, just like anyone could have.

  • @christinehede7578
    @christinehede7578 3 роки тому +771

    The Japanese Prime Mister made the right choices. Having to resign was unfair. All those people that worked to save the plant from exploding are heroes, every last one of them.

    • @FireOccator
      @FireOccator 3 роки тому +17

      The prime minister and many other powerful people were responsible for the disaster. Him resigning is the smallest justice possible.

    • @christinehede7578
      @christinehede7578 3 роки тому +120

      @@FireOccator he was not responsible at all, the company and whoever allowed them to ignore the safety problems are to blame. He made the best decisions available to him in an impossible situation that was not caused by him. He did not cause the earthquake nor the following tsunami. He also most likely had zero input into the placement and safety features of the power plant.

    • @FireOccator
      @FireOccator 3 роки тому +6

      @@christinehede7578 He was responsible for letting the agencies become captured.

    • @christinehede7578
      @christinehede7578 3 роки тому +51

      @@FireOccator what!

    • @bmhater1283
      @bmhater1283 3 роки тому +41

      @@FireOccator Do I hear bullshit?

  • @BrokeredHeart
    @BrokeredHeart 3 роки тому +491

    I'm absolutely heartbroken for that father who was hunting for his wife, father and youngest daughter. He did everything in his power to find them. I grieve with him and all the other parents, sons, daughters and grandparents, whose families were ripped apart that day by the tsunami. It's a living nightmare to see your entire town and everyone you know in it destroyed within a matter of hours. Truly horrific, and I can't even fathom the mental toll it has taken on the people of Futaba and Fukushima.

    • @theyracemesohardchair
      @theyracemesohardchair 2 роки тому

      🤣🤣🤣 yeh good one wasn’t it

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 2 роки тому +8

      The tsumani killed thousands. The nuclear power plant did not.

    • @CornerCaseStudio
      @CornerCaseStudio 2 роки тому +6

      @@theyracemesohardchair What does that even mean in the context of this person's comment?

    • @xxcrosssansxx2969
      @xxcrosssansxx2969 Рік тому +1

      @@theyracemesohardchair whats so funny 😐 you know that will piss people off

    • @robynmeyer7796
      @robynmeyer7796 2 місяці тому

      Most western people can’t comprehend the significance of leaving the area and abandoning his duty to remain. The village leader gave him permission to leave which in Japanese culture helps to negate the societal burden of shame and offer a simple acceptable perspective. In Japan etiquette is huge…it keeps order and it cripples those who don’t abide by it.

  • @kjoseph8135
    @kjoseph8135 3 роки тому +731

    I’m Japanese, and I was ten years old in this disaster.
    This documentary reminds me of the fear that I felt then. Also, it told me that unnamed heros enabled us to live in peaceful life now

    • @uwcb1
      @uwcb1 3 роки тому +17

      It must have been terrifying. How are you now? Do earthquakes bring it all back? I’m in New Orleans and since Katrina, hurricanes still trigger a lot of us.

    • @kjoseph8135
      @kjoseph8135 3 роки тому +45

      @@uwcb1
      I'm fine, thank you.
      I have lived in Tokyo more than 10 years.
      In Tokyo and its surrounding area , the 2011 disasters brought more psychological damages than physical's, such as panic buying mineral water and foods caused by feat of further quakes and Fukushima Daiichi incident . Also, my friends say watching news of tsunami and nuclear disasters then make them unstable.

    • @alanh1406
      @alanh1406 3 роки тому +15

      I hope you live a long and happy life.

    • @1painter4hire
      @1painter4hire 3 роки тому +7

      At least you lived to talk about it, Stay Safe 👍

    • @Pfromm007
      @Pfromm007 3 роки тому +9

      When very bad things like this happen, its always good to look for the helpers.
      Whenever I hear anything about radiation or nuclear, I always think of the brave Japanese and Russians who gave their lives to protect us and save the world.

  • @LindaStevensBZ
    @LindaStevensBZ 11 місяців тому +46

    I bow to the guys who risked it all.
    To venture inside and try to save the day, demands respect and thanks.

  • @claudehall7889
    @claudehall7889 3 роки тому +164

    I can't imagine going to work and my wife and daughter disappear in natural disaster with no answers on their whereabouts. That is worse than finding their remains.

  • @007vsMagua
    @007vsMagua 3 роки тому +401

    The Prime Minister was an honorable man, dealt a losing hand, and made the right calls. He has my total respect.

    • @randomleni
      @randomleni 2 роки тому +17

      Right like I don’t get why they basically fired him

    • @tsuna111
      @tsuna111 2 роки тому +1

      @@randomleni lol he resign coz of health issues

    • @jothain
      @jothain 2 роки тому +5

      I have full respect for this man. Though I despise the men that before him had not listened to safety problems acknowledged before. Peoples that weren't responsible of neglecting these are ones that should have been severe consequences, even after knowing the aftermath.

    • @feelincrispy7053
      @feelincrispy7053 2 роки тому +10

      I think the doco showed him in a pretty good light. There is far more to the political story than this showed. From memory it took them a about week if not a bit more to tell the world exactly what was really going on even though we could all see the plant exploding. But i do agree he seemed like a very honourable man making decisions zero people would like to make

    • @Dana9437
      @Dana9437 2 роки тому +1

      @@randomleni totally agree...he acted with wisdom and integrity. Glad that he was included in this documentary.

  • @Mattreyu199
    @Mattreyu199 3 роки тому +678

    I'd like to know how exactly the Prime Minister "mishandled" the crisis (as his critics said) and was forced to resign. Seems to me like he did the best job he could realistically do in that situation and that TEPCO did all of the mishandling, and I don't mean their workers.

    • @ChrisGurin
      @ChrisGurin 3 роки тому +140

      Given what we in the US have seen of REAL mismanagement, I agree with you: The PM looks like the soul of leadership. Why did they criticize him for going to the disaster site? Would they prefer he throw paper towels (or a tantrum)?

    • @shahabmos5130
      @shahabmos5130 3 роки тому +67

      He did not send any floating ghost , samurai , animal god giants , anime girls or boys , did not used any weeb to die in there , did not cut his finger , did not used the area to run a battle royal .
      Its how politics works .
      No matter what happens , opponents blame you.

    • @Venezolano410
      @Venezolano410 3 роки тому +74

      I'm under the impression that at the time, his critics didn't know the full story of what was going. As usual with politicians, they just base everything on initial reports and then grand stand like they can do an better job.

    • @spacejasontodd
      @spacejasontodd 3 роки тому +57

      I think by mishandling they meant keeping the disaster from the public and covering up its severity

    • @smartprocesssolutions748
      @smartprocesssolutions748 3 роки тому +7

      Pal, called scapegoat, innocent people go to jail all the time for other’s crimes. Fetching numbers and money to have a prison system.

  • @MattDoesLife539
    @MattDoesLife539 Рік тому +98

    " My generation built these nuclear plants. So we have to take responsibility for them. We can't dump this on the next generation."
    - Kazuko Sasaki, a 72-year-old grandmother who has volunteered to help clean up the Fukashima nuclear plant

    • @kimgallagher1815
      @kimgallagher1815 11 днів тому

      Nuclear plants are gaining popularity all for greed !

  • @michaelsease3844
    @michaelsease3844 3 роки тому +660

    TEPCO executives should have been the ones forced into the reactors to vent them.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 3 роки тому +46

      They were comfortably sitting in Tokyo

    • @Enonymouse_
      @Enonymouse_ 3 роки тому +28

      I was telling my friend at the time who lived in Tokyo, don't beleive what Tepco is telling you, you are not safe. She told me was making it up, when the reactor shit the bed and all that we know now, she can't say it to me now. I'm glad she's safe but i'm terribly sorry for what happened to the people of Japan, that was inexcusable negligence.

    • @jaybartgis5148
      @jaybartgis5148 3 роки тому +4

      What did the executives do wrong?

    • @spacejasontodd
      @spacejasontodd 3 роки тому +29

      @@jaybartgis5148 They didn't enforce the plant from tsunamis properly even though they had been told to do so three years earlier, later they lied to the minister about being able to vent out the plant when it was impossible to do so without energy

    • @XLTBlarg
      @XLTBlarg 3 роки тому +15

      @@spacejasontodd Sounds like they wasted alot of valuable time when they should have asked for govt to help them sooner.

  • @JohnMason8183
    @JohnMason8183 3 роки тому +835

    A very poignant story. Though I do not like politicians, I think the Prime Minister did his best. He did what he thought was right. He showed leadership in an unbelievably difficult situation. I'm further impressed that he participated in this report. A sad situation for all.

    • @jeffreyhancock8831
      @jeffreyhancock8831 3 роки тому +35

      I agree. But in this day and age, someone must bear the brunt of the blame, and it usually is the one in the most powerful position. Personally, I think that a rather high wall surrounding the plant may have helped, but then, I'm not an engineer, so.......

    • @pierreo33
      @pierreo33 3 роки тому +27

      @@jeffreyhancock8831 Early on in the video they said the power plant's sea wall had failed its test two years prior to the meltdown. Sorry for bad english

    • @TreasureHuntingNana
      @TreasureHuntingNana 2 роки тому +6

      totally agree with you

    • @myheartisinjapan3184
      @myheartisinjapan3184 2 роки тому +8

      Indeed, he is a very honorable man for his handling of such an immensely difficult situation.

    • @hooviedoovie5220
      @hooviedoovie5220 2 роки тому +14

      @@jeffreyhancock8831 there is another plant a couple miles downshore that was completely fine after the earthquake and tsunami, because their seawall was adequate.

  • @definitelynotfbi119
    @definitelynotfbi119 3 роки тому +429

    "When I had heard that the diesel generators had been destroyed, I couldn't square that, with reality." The way that he worded that was deeply haunting because he clearly thought about it so much, he distilled a million emotions, thoughts, fears, and rationalizations into a single statement.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 3 роки тому +7

      Because he knew that if a NPP loses its connection to the grid and the diesel generators disaster is imminent.

    • @Mom_sBasement
      @Mom_sBasement 3 роки тому +7

      I can’t believe they don’t have a plan B, C and D when you build plants in Earthquake and Tsunami zones.

    • @Gabriel-yd4bq
      @Gabriel-yd4bq 3 роки тому +20

      @@Mom_sBasement biggest problem was not building the emergency generators well above the 5m above water level. Crysis probably averted.

    • @crocodile1313
      @crocodile1313 3 роки тому +10

      @@Gabriel-yd4bq Totally agree. There had to be some meeting when they built the place where someone brought up a tsunami scenario. Safety shortcuts probably due to money, like it always is....

    • @Gabriel-yd4bq
      @Gabriel-yd4bq 3 роки тому +2

      @@crocodile1313 There was a meeting. There was a tsunami scenario. Just NOT an Earthquake+tsunami scenario, which is rare

  • @Rebander1549
    @Rebander1549 Рік тому +37

    The workers and firemen are heroes! Thank you to them 12 years later! All of you were so brave. God bless all of you and your country.

  • @Xfirefire
    @Xfirefire 2 роки тому +115

    I did not grasp the severity of what happened in this disaster. Thank god for all those who participated in resolving the problem, you did life-saving work.

    • @drewthompson7457
      @drewthompson7457 2 роки тому

      The problem is not resolved. Radiation can last millennia. Last I heard, they were planning to dump millions of gallons of radioactive water into the Pacific. Radaition has continuoulsy invaded the environment.

    • @turkeydoctor5546
      @turkeydoctor5546 2 роки тому +5

      It will never be resolved. It will continue until the end of time

    • @pipeqez911
      @pipeqez911 2 роки тому +1

      @@turkeydoctor5546 they did a hell of a better job than the soviets in 1986.

    • @turkeydoctor5546
      @turkeydoctor5546 2 роки тому +1

      @@pipeqez911 that's total BS.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 Рік тому +7

      Chernobyl did not have containment, which did not help. Fukushima still leaks radioactive substances.

  • @medievalmusiclover
    @medievalmusiclover 2 роки тому +144

    What a brave scientist, pilot, fire-fighters, and all the people that were trying to fix this complex issue. There were just heroes. My respects for Japanese people. God bless you all.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Рік тому

      isn't this Dangerous? I love how they didn't do anything about it🤣🤣🤣

  • @Herrera_70
    @Herrera_70 2 роки тому +205

    So many people lost their loved ones in this horrible event. This is such a touching reporting, I can feel the dad's pain, he went through so much, losing so many family members but staying strong for the daughter he still had. God bless all these heroes.

    • @StrazdasLT
      @StrazdasLT 2 роки тому +9

      No, they did not. There was only 1 death that could be attributable to the nuclear plant. Unless by the event you mean the evacuation, then yes, over 2000 was killed by the evacuation.

    • @lt3880
      @lt3880 Рік тому +12

      @@StrazdasLT they are talking about the tsunami, the one that killed several thousand people....

    • @jamesheilman2634
      @jamesheilman2634 Рік тому +3

      @@StrazdasLT amazing that people are absolutely not paying attention.

  • @johnphilippides7629
    @johnphilippides7629 2 роки тому +27

    this is all so sad but that picture of his youngest daughter Yuna absolutely broke my heart. i hope everyone affected can find some peace

  • @jortiz1451
    @jortiz1451 3 роки тому +557

    Frontline is just the best at documentaries. No one comes close.

    • @Ben-ok2ue
      @Ben-ok2ue 3 роки тому +7

      Facts

    • @Ben-ok2ue
      @Ben-ok2ue 3 роки тому +30

      This guys voice too

    • @Perkelenaattori
      @Perkelenaattori 3 роки тому +13

      Errol Morris and Ken Burns do but they're mostly historians while Frontline does top notch current stuff. Definitely quality.

    • @bobbyhill5067
      @bobbyhill5067 3 роки тому +5

      Ken Burns comes close but hes on the same side as PBS tho

    • @michaelfell4167
      @michaelfell4167 3 роки тому +6

      Exactly, Frontline is simply amazing. I just watched their documentary on poverty in America.

  • @ulugbektoshtemirov4068
    @ulugbektoshtemirov4068 3 роки тому +80

    Knowing that u will increase the risk of cancer but still standing in the protection of japan and world? Just speechless

    • @greggrobinson5116
      @greggrobinson5116 3 роки тому +16

      The crews at Chernobyl were just as brave. Assuming they were told the truth about what was happening, that is. And that's a big assumption for the USSR.

    • @ulugbektoshtemirov4068
      @ulugbektoshtemirov4068 3 роки тому +11

      @@greggrobinson5116 yeah exactly they were great also and huge respect for both crews

    • @StrazdasLT
      @StrazdasLT 2 роки тому +1

      @@greggrobinson5116 There is some footage that surfaced recently from the soviets documenting the cleanup (hoping they can portray this as a soviet victory). The guys with the shovels doing the cover up were told they will likely die.

  • @6120mcghee
    @6120mcghee 3 роки тому +122

    "The living are more important than the dead." One of the greatest quotes in the history of man. And it took a disaster like this.

    • @wesgatehouse1186
      @wesgatehouse1186 3 роки тому

      Polo 0lal
      09a

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk 3 роки тому +5

      But no one died from Fukushima radiation.

    • @asordidreality
      @asordidreality 3 роки тому +9

      @@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk It was about the people who died from the tsunami....

    • @rockchalk9078
      @rockchalk9078 3 роки тому +4

      @@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk You're apparently a little slow...pay attention please

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk 3 роки тому +3

      @@rockchalk9078 Read the title of the video Lame Brain; "Inside Japan's Nuclear Meltdown". And of course no one died from the meltdown. Duh.

  • @Highice007
    @Highice007 2 роки тому +18

    I had no idea the raw courage of the nuclear plant workers. They are heros on another level. They deserve Japans highest honours. 🎖

  • @EMS999ful
    @EMS999ful 3 роки тому +292

    The Japanese Prime Minister did his job, under the most extreme pressure he was man enough to make decisions, knowing that the whole country and possibly further afield would be contaminated, it's tough at the top, a shame he had to resign.

    • @Kunal-df9eu
      @Kunal-df9eu 3 роки тому +11

      Exactly my thoughts. It's not the critique that counts, what counts is the man in the arena.

    • @lylen2
      @lylen2 3 роки тому +10

      Liberal Democratic Party nepotistic retired politicians running Tepco. Kan and the democrats are blamed, and presto, Abe is back in charge.

    • @daniel3231995
      @daniel3231995 3 роки тому +5

      this smells like sanitized propaganda,as if it was all really cleaned up. hidden effects continue to prop up,even decontamination workers mistreated & covered up rn.

    • @kf8575
      @kf8575 3 роки тому +6

      Did his job??
      Maybe, but whoever passed the planning approval for the plant's tsunami defenses which should have been at least double the height they were, should be held responsible for this

    • @joedufour8188
      @joedufour8188 3 роки тому +4

      He kept the true nature of the disaster hidden from the world. Had he not done that, there would have been much more help and a lot less suffering and death.

  • @machinech183
    @machinech183 3 роки тому +238

    A politician willing to go the very site of the disaster to find out what is really going on and DO something about it... and they force him to resign. Rather depressing to see extreme ignorance so widespread, nowhere is safe. They should have sent the TEPCO executives into the reactor... and left them there, for science of course.

    • @ricktherockandroller
      @ricktherockandroller 3 роки тому +10

      FOR SCIENCE!

    • @Arichiluv3
      @Arichiluv3 3 роки тому +2

      True

    • @jtpeterson27
      @jtpeterson27 3 роки тому +1

      For science of coarse! Anything goes as long as it’s for educational purposes….

    • @00chla50
      @00chla50 3 роки тому +27

      Same thing happened to President Carter. He went to 3 mile island nuclear power plant when it was in crisis. Thankfully the container did not explode. People make fun of him because he was a peanut farmer, but he was actually a nuclear engineer in navy. So he could actually understand and ask intelligent questions and understand the answers, including making suggestions.

    • @sebastiankirby4651
      @sebastiankirby4651 3 роки тому +5

      @@00chla50 another reason why jimmy carter is an underrated president

  • @clusterguard
    @clusterguard 3 роки тому +413

    may all of the victims Rest In Peace. best wishes to all of our brothers and sisters in Japan, from Nuuk, Greenland.

    • @infini_ryu9461
      @infini_ryu9461 3 роки тому +25

      IIRC only one person even died as a direct result of the meltdown since it occurred, yet we act as if the 18,000 who died in the earthquake and tsunami are second fiddle to the meltdown.

    • @KenKobayashiRasmussen
      @KenKobayashiRasmussen 3 роки тому +8

      @@infini_ryu9461 Official figures show that there have been 2313 disaster-related deaths among evacuees from Fukushima prefecture. Disaster-related deaths are in addition to the about 19,500 that were killed by the earthquake or tsunami.

    • @infini_ryu9461
      @infini_ryu9461 3 роки тому +15

      @@KenKobayashiRasmussen Yes, and the absolute majority were elderly, because the Japanese government ripped people out of hospitals and elderly from their homes. It was a completely irresponsible evacuation caused by the government. I wouldn't argue against that.
      As for people who died from the radiation, it was trivial. Radiophobia in Fukushima killed more than the incompetence of Soviets in Chernobyl, that should tell you something.

    • @clairerobinson7658
      @clairerobinson7658 3 роки тому +6

      @@infini_ryu9461 Chernobyl numbers can’t be trusted.

    • @infini_ryu9461
      @infini_ryu9461 3 роки тому +4

      @@clairerobinson7658 Well, until you have all the best minds on the subject saying differently, I'll listen.

  • @kemblephotography
    @kemblephotography 2 роки тому +94

    Incredibly well done documentary, as expected with PBS. Firefighters around the world don't get enough credit for what they do everyday, much less during extraordinary events like this. Can't imagine being an employee of Tepco and being stuck between wanting to leave a melting down plant and knowing the fate of Japan may rest in your hands. It would be interesting to see a follow up on this story by PBS, given it's been over 10 years since the incident.

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk 2 роки тому +1

      It was already a predetermined outcome of the fate of the people of Japan even without anyone at the plant. That's why they designed containment vessels.

  • @robsan52
    @robsan52 3 роки тому +187

    The fisherman saving his boat was incredibly brave!

    • @johndoe-ss9bz
      @johndoe-ss9bz 3 роки тому +6

      Over 40 ft. Waves!!!

    • @tamarrajames3590
      @tamarrajames3590 2 роки тому +21

      He was also very intelligent, the boat was safer out on the water than in the dock. He took his best chance.🖤🇨🇦

    • @tamarrajames3590
      @tamarrajames3590 2 роки тому

      @@markcoupe5748 LOL🖤🇨🇦

    • @777SI-gsw
      @777SI-gsw 2 роки тому +4

      It was either get to higher ground or get to sea before the waves reach shallower areas. Several boats at sea were able to safely deal with the waves. Once the waves begin to drag bottom and crest, there is little hope of escaping to sea. (Unless you are on an aircraft carrier or another large vessel)

    • @robinstewart6510
      @robinstewart6510 2 роки тому +3

      No bravery about it. He did exactly what he should have to save his boat. A boat is always better off at sea, on the open water, than being battered around by the breaking waves, other vessels, and debris near shore. This is why the Navy, Coast Guard, or anyone else with a large enough vessel, worldwide, always head to sea if possible before such situations. With a hurricane, for example, the goal is to get out far enough to skirt around the worst of the storm. In this case, the goal is just to get away from the shore.

  • @sushiromifune7096
    @sushiromifune7096 3 роки тому +42

    A representative from the Japan Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said "Meltdown" and was shut out from the press conference by the government.

  • @claudiafunez7125
    @claudiafunez7125 3 роки тому +65

    I am in awe of the bravery of people in the face of danger. There are many people who would lay down their lives for the sake of others. Altruistic and admirable.

  • @jamesrogalski2085
    @jamesrogalski2085 2 роки тому +185

    To say that the Japanese people are brave is an under statement. Whether in battle or in this situation they have shown themselves to be heroes to their people.

    • @zebunker
      @zebunker 2 роки тому +4

      Just ants. NPCs

    • @smokeymcpot69
      @smokeymcpot69 2 роки тому

      Your likes are at 69 😏

    • @KamalasNotLikeUs
      @KamalasNotLikeUs 2 роки тому +5

      And by “heroes,” you mean sheep. 👌🏾

    • @deadshot4245
      @deadshot4245 2 роки тому

      The were there first suicide squads in ww2 just think of they hadn’t surrendered how bad Japan would be we were gonna drop 4 nukes on them a month because that was our current production levels at the time. Basically it’s we will beat you into submission by all means. A wild time even then you would think the CNPP would be a solid lesson of cutting corners on power plants will always end badly. I’m just an American idiot and I see that storing all generators in lower levels in a tsunami prone country is just asking for it

    • @dennisduncan7561
      @dennisduncan7561 Рік тому +1

      GE didn't ignore calls to update the plant.

  • @C2K777
    @C2K777 3 роки тому +171

    There was another TEPCO plant that also suffered issues due to this series of events. If you use salt water on these kind of reactors then it's a death sentence for them and they could never be made operational again. TEPCO forbade plant workers at both sites from pumping salt water in to manage cooling. At the other plant workers ignored that order when they realised they would lose adequate cooling and then containment if they didn't use the only water they could harness ( sea water). That plant, whilst loosing one of it's reactors didn't explode. Let that sink in a moment.
    Just to be clear I am NOT blaming the workers at Fukushima who acted admirably, i'm blaming the management of the company that placed profit and bank balance above all else. The fact they are still trying to silence those workers and holding their jobs as ransom speaks volumes.

    • @pakeshde7518
      @pakeshde7518 3 роки тому +8

      If I remember they wanted to sack the guy as well but the blockback was so feirce they had to keep him. I think he later *accepted* a payout and full pension to walk away but the pr damage was already done.

    • @ronaldvankuyk908
      @ronaldvankuyk908 3 роки тому +1

      Thee wereld intofusion tritium deuterium helium 4 etcetera Mao Tay salontafel roneinst

    • @vwbusguy
      @vwbusguy 3 роки тому +6

      American designed reactor, nobody talks about the fact that it was poorly designed for earthquakes in this region

    • @richardcranium3417
      @richardcranium3417 2 роки тому +14

      @@vwbusguy How about this…..Don’t build a nuclear power plant near the ocean in a country that sits on the Pacific ring of fire.
      Really? Who is the genius that came up with that idea?

    • @embersaffron5522
      @embersaffron5522 2 роки тому +6

      @@richardcranium3417 Why? They worked perfectly till a double whammy of godlike bad luck, and the other cores have fucnctioned since

  • @diegus012
    @diegus012 2 роки тому +57

    Another great piece by frontline. I am in awe of the people involved in averting the disaster from getting so much worse. I wish them good health into the future and thank them for their sacrifice

  • @burusho8488
    @burusho8488 2 роки тому +25

    Living at other side of the globe i offer my deep condolences for the families of this disaster and respect for the courage of the brave sons of Japan. Specifically those firefighters and pilots. 🙏

  • @Svveet69
    @Svveet69 2 роки тому +27

    Hats off to the brave men and women who prevented a larger disaster from happening. I hope that all those who lost loved ones find peace

    • @GotoHere
      @GotoHere 2 роки тому +3

      I didn’t see any women in the plant?

    • @UpinsmokeXVI
      @UpinsmokeXVI Рік тому

      Don’t be so woke and afraid of offending people there’s literally no women in the plant at all

    • @ideuniqaxealot
      @ideuniqaxealot Рік тому +1

      @@UpinsmokeXVI There were female employees at the plant. Do you think the video captures every single person who worked there at the time?

    • @ellsbellsbabyy
      @ellsbellsbabyy Рік тому +3

      it’s time to admit you guys replying to this are just losers, especially if you’re old enough to comment here in the first place, bc not only is it irrelevant to say there’s no women in the video bc pbs obviously not putting every single soul that contributed to the efforts of this disaster in one 55-min video, there Are women in the video. there are about three shots showing women workers sat in the control room before they downgraded to the skeleton crew. one of the people recording the video of where the vent valves are post-disaster is a woman - you can hear her talking quite clearly. and some of the people shown in hazmat suits at various points in the video look to be women, also. additionally, a few comments away from you is a well-documented quote from an elderly woman who volunteered to be clean-up crew. all that stretching to avoid admitting that Many many people - inevitably including women - risked so much and worked so hard to, as david said, prevent larger disaster. there’s no sensible excuse as to why you’re going out of your way to dismiss that fact. and you want to not look like a weirdo???

  • @kellyshaw5428
    @kellyshaw5428 3 роки тому +65

    That's so sad about his family. He lost his father, wife and youngest daughter all at once.

    • @lucasrem1870
      @lucasrem1870 2 роки тому

      Still leaders build nukes!
      Mad leaders!

  • @muchadoaboutnothing6196
    @muchadoaboutnothing6196 3 роки тому +65

    The issue isn’t the idea of nuclear energy itself, had the emergency generators been installed on the roof tops as in many commercial buildings where flooding is deemed a risk Fukushima would probably never had entered our collective consciousness

    • @namename9998
      @namename9998 3 роки тому +7

      Weren't they in the basement because of protection against earthquakes, but the room wasn't waterproofed? The wall not being tall enough seems like a better explanation (Onagwa's was and it suffered less damage even though it was closer to the epicenter).

    • @FAL87
      @FAL87 3 роки тому +4

      @@namename9998 its like you cant think of everything that can go wrong ;)

    • @0Clewi0
      @0Clewi0 3 роки тому +5

      Other detail is the venting needing electricity, I guess most of the most likely reasons you will need to vent will include electricity being out.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 3 роки тому +2

      I guess they hoped to have at least a little electricity from emergency batteries but the tsunami disagreed

    • @solewalk
      @solewalk 3 роки тому +2

      I read somewehre that originally the plant was to be built at a higher elevation to avoid disasters like this, but Japan has its own nuclear mafia who arbitrarily decided to build it at a lower elevation for the cost.

  • @rarebird_82
    @rarebird_82 10 місяців тому +28

    Those who volunteered to vent the reactors - unimaginable bravery.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 10 місяців тому

      We should not need heroes to generate electricity.

  • @RobTheTrucker
    @RobTheTrucker 3 роки тому +135

    "Every lie we tell incurs a debt to the truth. Sooner or later the debt is paid".
    Valery Alekseyevich Legasov

    • @17N.
      @17N. 3 роки тому +12

      Valery Alekseyevich Legasov (Russian: Валерий Алексеевич Легасов; 1 September 1936 - 27 April 1988) was a Soviet inorganic chemist and a member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. He is now mainly remembered for his work as the chief of the commission investigating the Chernobyl disaster.

    • @forrestgump5959
      @forrestgump5959 3 роки тому +8

      Basic problem in this world. Only the truth counts. Can't be better said than in this quote.

    • @forrestgump5959
      @forrestgump5959 3 роки тому +3

      @@17N. thanks for this info

    • @Militaria_Collector
      @Militaria_Collector 3 роки тому

      And...his tapes were not the end all be all cornucopia of truth that the hbo series would have you believe....let’s not forget he was a lifelong part member.

  • @namelessentity5851
    @namelessentity5851 3 роки тому +555

    The fisherman who sailed into the waves... I know he knew what he was doing, and it does seem a valid maneuver, but still that took a lot of courage, as there is *always* a chance of not making it over the top of the wave, engine cuts out from getting swamped, etc.. You can be as highly trained and/or experienced as can be and still, things can and will go wrong.
    From my perspective, it is an especially epic thing to do, as even though I spent about a little less then half of my 50 years out on the Great Lakes of Michigan, bodies of water are not my favorite place. Even though I've spent a lifetime always near a lake, both deep water and inclement weather ( especially when out on said water ) have an embarrassing ability to unnerve me, they have such a grip of terror on me, I honestly would sooner play Russian roulette rather then go out on the water in rough chop. Whatever that Gentleman saw when he reached the wave... that would, for me, be akin to staring at a black hole approaching Earth, or seeing some ancient cosmic horror. Wind and wave, and what lives down in the dark, are often the main topics of unpleasant dreams I frequently have. That Dude is THE Bull of the Woods, the big Hoss, bar NONE!

    • @tonytresfg2323
      @tonytresfg2323 3 роки тому +1

      Nah bro he's just Japanese smh

    • @Matthew-yj9fk
      @Matthew-yj9fk 3 роки тому +17

      If he lost his boats he'd rather be dead anyways. That's his livelihood.

    • @samuelrizzari994
      @samuelrizzari994 3 роки тому +22

      I love everything about your comment. From your writing to your praise of the sailor, your post is beautiful.

    • @vasiliyshukshin7466
      @vasiliyshukshin7466 2 роки тому +9

      Lake Michigan nearly claimed us once. Storm just rolled out of nowhere and churned the lake up like nothing I've seen before.
      I can only imagine what it's like to climb over a 40 footer.

    • @faggianogeuiseppi5135
      @faggianogeuiseppi5135 2 роки тому +2

      Shoot better then staying and waiting. Smart

  • @RyanMr6.7
    @RyanMr6.7 2 роки тому +22

    I applaud and respect the Prime Minister! He showed true strength and compassion for lives all across the globe. He should have never been criticized for doing something so courageous.

    • @maureenstevens6824
      @maureenstevens6824 9 місяців тому +1

      With circumstances he had absolutely no control over. His thoughts and dedication to his people was phenomenal. This was something no one had faced before and he saved the world from a catastrophe that can't even be imagined by his dedication, so I don't understand why he was made to resign.

  • @unit0137
    @unit0137 2 роки тому +25

    To be honest, I cannot blame their minister for how he reacted, and in a way, Tepco seemingly was doing all it could. Even if they were giving up hope, it'd be a similar response to most of us. I'm most impressed at the bravery that the fire fighters showed, as they quite literally had never even prepared for such a situation probably, and yet they worked efficiently and methodically instantly on the moment's notice. It is very respectable since it was like nobody was able to make a good plan until they showed up and decided to risk it all.

    • @marianmarkovic5881
      @marianmarkovic5881 Рік тому +1

      Well one thing most peaple dont recognize is, in Japan only confirmed informations are published out. Meanwhile here its about who will relase breaking news first, often at cost of accuracy of information presented,...

  • @kazuej
    @kazuej 3 роки тому +72

    Thank you very much for the people who worked to save Japan and world especially, who went into the ground zero. I pray for your health. I also pray for you who lost your family members. 🙏

  • @ianfiddes9871
    @ianfiddes9871 3 роки тому +71

    My heart bleeds for those that lost family, relatives, livelihoods. 😢Basically everything; but kept their dignity throughout: My respect for the Japanese people’s in the face of a massive disaster is great.

    • @krashd
      @krashd 3 роки тому +3

      This is about the nuclear disaster, not the tsunami. Only 2 of the 20,000 people who died that day died at the power plant.

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk 3 роки тому +4

      @@krashd And those two died of drowning. No one died from radiation even after 10 years.

    • @gregtronica3569
      @gregtronica3569 2 роки тому

      we get it, youre a good person

  • @Adykayful
    @Adykayful 3 роки тому +31

    I'm not finished with the documentary yet, but I already have a lot of respect for the PM. It was a very serious situation and I think he handled it as well as could be expected. I'm surprised he was criticized so harshly and forced to resign. Maybe it's because I'm American and our leadership is known for being terrible, but to me he did everything a real leader should do. He was damned if he did nothing and damned when he did do something. Given the circumstances he did a really good job.

    • @transistor754
      @transistor754 2 роки тому

      Hey.. it was a free gift from the People of America to abrogate Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings under the "Nuclear Science for Peace Program" ... The Japanese would NEVER have taken on Nuclear Power on their own after seeing the effects of the bombs. General Electric should be there hanging by their necks.... or helping the clean up at least. Note to aMurkans... it's pronounced NuuCleeeAAArr not NukeYoular.... learn how to read.

  • @Oblithian
    @Oblithian Рік тому +33

    I remember watching the news as they described the workers going in to vent the reactor, and praying for their wellbeing.
    I just hope plans now exist worldwide to better handle the situations at their various stages, as well as, improvements in construction and equipment.

  • @Davidlp70
    @Davidlp70 3 роки тому +101

    Frontline really needs to win emmy every year. outstanding reporting

    • @StrazdasLT
      @StrazdasLT 2 роки тому +1

      An emmy for a documentary that flat out lies in the title? I know emmys dont mean much but come on.

  • @msyahwey4ever
    @msyahwey4ever 3 роки тому +57

    Finally, an update! Thanks PBS!

    • @drewsfjord
      @drewsfjord 3 роки тому +6

      You know why they uploaded this? Because Japan is releasing contaminated water into the ocean and the world media is ignoring this. It's a indirect way to let people know.

    • @tombolo4120
      @tombolo4120 3 роки тому +2

      @@drewsfjord I've heard there's a far greater risk of desaster than has already happened !

    • @ronaldvankuyk908
      @ronaldvankuyk908 3 роки тому +1

      @@drewsfjord reminder the bikini's this japonnen fishing boat contaminatie nagasaki hiroshima auto roneinst

  • @chris_A8502
    @chris_A8502 2 роки тому +48

    My heart goes out to the Japanese people who's lives were lost, or forever changed by this fateful event. I also have great sympathy for the prime minister, who was harshly held responsible for the response to this unprecedented disaster. His position was one that all world leaders would wish to avoid.

  • @shanacharlie9940
    @shanacharlie9940 Рік тому +17

    In 2016, they found the remains of his missing daughter near where his father was found.

  • @hishouha
    @hishouha 2 роки тому +79

    I became teary eyed at the end, this is terrible, so many people were lost in the tsunami, so many lives taken away and so many others changed forever. I hope they all find peace… I can’t even imagine their grief
    TEPCO has, in my opinion, really badly reacted to this disaster and not only that, but the safety protocols were not up to part. I think they are to be held responsible for a lot of the damages and lives affected.
    I remember the news when I was 10 years old, it was so scary and so surreal, how could something like this be happening?
    The Prime Minister did his best with what he had, he made very hard choices and although he didn’t tell everything that was happening, most of what he did was right and he didn’t sit on his ass.
    Those who fought during these days have my respect, their courage is beyond imaginable. Looking at the footage, it’s so scary and sad…

    • @ltipst2962
      @ltipst2962 Рік тому

      @@transistor754 disgusting comment go away friendless worm

    • @ltipst2962
      @ltipst2962 Рік тому +1

      Sorry you had to see his comment above. It is scary and sad. They're heroic and have my respect too.

    • @Russianmanpissinmyass
      @Russianmanpissinmyass 2 місяці тому

      It's no one's fault but mother earth.
      And yes the plant was definitely not up to par,

  • @MenwithPurpose2012
    @MenwithPurpose2012 2 роки тому +11

    The prime minister and those firefighters just deserve a medal of honor and recognition. Incredible bravely in the face of unimaginable danger. Hats off to them. They deserve a standing ovation

  • @iamleephong
    @iamleephong 3 роки тому +47

    In this case, escape was not an option. Fighting was the only way

  • @teacherhomieg
    @teacherhomieg Рік тому +22

    The contamination went out to sea and even reached the west coast. Imagine if three reactors would’ve melted down! The entire world was saved by those brave workers. Glad the U.S. looked into it. I remember the news reports. I live in CA and was worried about the winds bringing a potential fallout cloud over here.

    • @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk
      @danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Рік тому +4

      Three reactors did melt down and no one on the planet was injured by radiation. You watch too many movies.

    • @Shunyas
      @Shunyas Рік тому

      US only took a drone footage and placed a camera 20 miles far from the nuclear reactor. Everything on ground was actually done by the Japanese.
      US could not stop drugs flowing into its borders leave alone preventing a nuclear melt down.

    • @marianmarkovic5881
      @marianmarkovic5881 Рік тому +2

      Naahh you overreacting,..first meltdown aint that scary, All in all. Situation was handled well, given situation. (having 3 out of 6 reactors in cold shutdown during accident helped a lot)
      I love when somebody scream contamination reachet here and there ,... well what levels? Minimal, barely measurable. its even more funny from country that contaminated entire world by testing Nukes all around...

  • @jesusfranco4571
    @jesusfranco4571 2 роки тому +8

    PBS never seems to disappoint. Frontline is awesome

  • @tuakilaumeamanu9383
    @tuakilaumeamanu9383 2 роки тому +13

    when i heard it on the radio from my island Tonga, i didn't quite get hold of the threat of the nuclear plant was bringing then its showing here on the video. wow, just amazing the sacrifices, the difficult choices those Japanese heroes had to take, from the Prime Minister to all the engineers, firefighters, pilots everybody! I hope you all live a happy life

    • @StrazdasLT
      @StrazdasLT 2 роки тому +1

      What sacrifices? No one died.

    • @tuakilaumeamanu9383
      @tuakilaumeamanu9383 2 роки тому +2

      @@StrazdasLT they sacrificed their safety. They were scared shitless but they chose not to run away. That's the real sacrifice.

  • @Wealllovekaira
    @Wealllovekaira 3 роки тому +41

    Pretty bold for a documentary to skip over the main parts of the story. Like how there was an order not to dump sea water into the reactor in fear of damages to the reactor

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 3 роки тому +1

      Save Japan but don't tamper with property of Tepco!

    • @toejam7606
      @toejam7606 3 роки тому

      Frontline is trash,minstrels thinks it’s informative, lol

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 3 роки тому +10

      Precisely: the plant director, Yoshida, reportedly disobeyed upper management and cooled the reactor using sea water.
      Yoshida died of cancer shortly after the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

    • @Wealllovekaira
      @Wealllovekaira 3 роки тому +8

      @@pleiadiblu2365 I didn’t know he died… it was upsetting before but now it’s just enraging that they would just completely ignore talking about that brave, brilliant, selfless man’s actions. Disgusting.

    • @robertnomok9750
      @robertnomok9750 3 роки тому +3

      And dont forget how japanese goverment tried to under play level of danger while fearing to take any responsibilities. Other countries were ready to send help while japan was only THINKING about how to deal with plant. They wasted days on that. Also they want to dump toxic water from reactor into the ocean now,

  • @richardclingempeel4835
    @richardclingempeel4835 6 місяців тому +2

    That tingle down your spine is your soul recognzing the importance of what you are doing would make a great difference in many lives

  • @davidchrist1037
    @davidchrist1037 2 роки тому +6

    Award winning video, you don't get better than front line. A heroically dangerous event the whole world is grateful.

  • @ash-is-napping
    @ash-is-napping 2 роки тому +39

    The Chernobyl disaster captivated when I learnt about nuclear fusion in physics at school (early 2000s). Such a horrific disaster, and such a terrible cover up, yet now we have the stories from those brave survivors and those who risked their lives to save us all. We all hope that our government has learnt from these disasters and that’s why there was much criticism at the time on Japan’s government for trying to water down how severe Fukushima was. As with Chernobyl, it is the brave people on the ground that we pay tribute to that risked their lives. Not just those featured here, but many more involved in the cleanup.

    • @jannamyers6792
      @jannamyers6792 2 роки тому +1

      People were not trained. It was a hail Mary all the way.

    • @ash-is-napping
      @ash-is-napping 2 роки тому

      @@jannamyers6792 the scientists had training (and raised concerns about the condition of the reactor and safety protocols) but the first responders didn’t.

    • @transistor754
      @transistor754 2 роки тому +3

      Hey.. it was a free gift from the People of America to abrogate Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings under the "Nuclear Science for Peace Program" ... The Japanese would NEVER have taken on Nuclear Power on their own after seeing the effects of the bombs. General Electric should be there hanging by their necks.... or helping the clean up at least. Note to aMurkans... it's pronounced NuuCleeeAAArr not NukeYoular.... learn how to read.

    • @chrisloesch1870
      @chrisloesch1870 11 місяців тому

      Oh baloney the Japanese knew what they were getting into with nuclear power. Many there are opposed to it but many are not.

    • @karenwelsh1705
      @karenwelsh1705 9 місяців тому

      @@transistor754 America is responsible for many millions of deaths worldwide over the last century, they either bake the pie or put not just their finger in the pie but their whole uninvited and unwarranted fist in the pie. America and their wholesome "Christian" society is where the evil one Satan resides.

  • @NealB123
    @NealB123 2 роки тому +59

    This was an excellent documentary but it gave a very simplistic view of what went on at the plant. Once the generators flooded and the power went out, every second of every minute of every hour for days was a desperate life and death struggle to find ways to cool the nuclear cores and prevent catastrophic breaches of the containment vessels. There were no plans for a nuclear disaster of this magnitude and everything had to be made up on the fly. Pretty much everything that could go wrong did go wrong. Salute to the plant workers led by Masao Yoshida and all the courageous firefighters and soldiers who never gave up. It would be inaccurate to say that they won the fight, but they at least fought it to a draw and kept the worst of the radiation sealed inside the containment vessels. All of them are heroes.

    • @W210E50AMG
      @W210E50AMG 2 роки тому +2

      What beats me is, how can it NOT be possible to establish emergency power/ water supply within 96 hrs ?

    • @Tom-jk3hy
      @Tom-jk3hy 2 роки тому

      You should be writer for Google dude of every second, of every minute, of every hour, of every day, of every week, of every year, of every decade, of every century ,of every millennium..
      How am I doing so far ?

    • @transistor754
      @transistor754 2 роки тому

      Hey.. it was a free gift from the People of America to abrogate Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings under the "Nuclear Science for Peace Program" ... The Japanese would NEVER have taken on Nuclear Power on their own after seeing the effects of the bombs. General Electric should be there hanging by their necks.... or helping the clean up at least. Note to aMurkans... it's pronounced NuuCleeeAAArr not NukeYoular.... learn how to read.

    • @dennisduncan7561
      @dennisduncan7561 Рік тому +2

      Found the troll.

  • @the_infinitelearning
    @the_infinitelearning 11 місяців тому +5

    What metal are these men made of? It is not the absence of fear but the conviction to stand for more than just yourself. Salute to all these people who went in to save the people and country.

  • @kt8050
    @kt8050 3 роки тому +292

    So heart breaking. Always the average joe stuffers the most. In the end executive at tepco was acquitted and the company was only fined 3.5 million dollar

    • @tomnaughton
      @tomnaughton 3 роки тому +9

      @Indy Sanders they should’ve been fined whatever the current U.S. national debt is

    • @aryanbhuta3382
      @aryanbhuta3382 3 роки тому +10

      @@tomnaughton You do know this is Japan, right? They're not paying any money to the US.

    • @tomnaughton
      @tomnaughton 3 роки тому +4

      @@aryanbhuta3382 I never said that. I said they should’ve been fined however much the current US national debt is

    • @drewsfjord
      @drewsfjord 3 роки тому +10

      @@tomnaughton That's not the bad part, They are releasing all the contaminated water in the ocean. Japan is a weird country, They actually wanted to hold parts of the Olympics here.

    • @hayek218
      @hayek218 3 роки тому +1

      This reactor is an old US model forced to buy from the US government. This is why no Japanese knew how to fix the problem when it occurred.
      This is the truth but it is so political that nobody can talk in public.

  • @darrenmetal3338
    @darrenmetal3338 3 роки тому +50

    I live 35 miles away from the crippled nuclear plant when all of this happened. I know people who moved from the affected areas and still suffering on a daily basis. I had to move myself cause my house was damaged by the earthquake. I know people who lost their entire family. Tepco is a shame and so was the government at that time. Holland, USA France were one of the first countries who offered help but the Japanese declined all help from outside. They lied about almost everything, explosions, the actual amount of leaking etc. No one went to jail or was punished for what has happened. Still till today there are fathers walking with a bucket and a shovel just outside the exclusion zone looking for their family members .............

    • @theyracemesohardchair
      @theyracemesohardchair 2 роки тому

      🤣🤣🤣 hilarious isn’t it!? 🪣♠️🤣

    • @KittenBowl1
      @KittenBowl1 2 роки тому

      I live in Japan and none of what you wrote is remotely true. And why are you blaming the Japanese government for the private institution's mistake?? You're obviously an American as no Japanese here uses "miles" but km only and Europeans use km as well.
      Firstly, no one government officials lied to the public they will be charged and go to jail for real. This isn't Soviet Union era, cover ups are always later revealed as there're third parties who check on these illegitimate conducts of government officials.
      What makes you think the Japanese government was obligated to let the foreign government tied organizations that we didn't see they were qualified to assess the situation for the national Japanese security matters, nor we needed to involve them. It is YOU the Westerner, especially you the American who always feel the need to intervene other country's local matter and when your "support" is refused you get upset and become delusional. Leave Japan if you don't like the way we live, our culture nor the way we lead our lives. The Japanese government didn't lie about anything, stop spreading rumors that are not true. Ridiculous. In Japan it is a common knowledge that Tepco who owns these nuclear plants, the PRIVATE power company is corrupt and bureaucratic. This is why the PM had to fly there to find out what was actually happening at the nuclear plant.
      I am also fully aware of the current situation of Fukushima as we had run several local projects to cultivate their local economy, and we do not have men walking with a bucket and a shovel outside of exclusion zone endlessly looking for their lost family members of any sorts. That would be picked up by our Japanese media instantly even if one or two fathers are doing that. Most of them actually moved to other locations. And it is not our culture to be stuck in the history and to act like a child as you described. And you think some in Fukushima are the only one. There're many people who lost their loved ones in Tsunami, and I know of people who actually lost their loved ones among my relatives in north of Japan. And none of them are endlessly looking for their loved ones. I feel sorry for you that being a foreigner, you can't really understand the Japanese culture or its people at all, and usually end up getting delusional and salty. I mean didn't you see the father at the ceremony to calm the spirit with the monk in the video? That is to say good bye to the lost wife whose body was found and to the daughter whose body was not found. That is Shintoism which is the core believe of Japanese people and its culture. We live for the ones that are actually alive and do not dwell on the past.

    • @teddycustumz3267
      @teddycustumz3267 2 роки тому +10

      @@theyracemesohardchair found the edgy teen

    • @bookaufman9643
      @bookaufman9643 2 роки тому

      Perhaps it's a cultural thing that I don't quite understand but you don't lie in an emergency that could have the effect that that plants meltdown nearly had. I say nearly because it could have been even worse and it was historically bad to begin I'm currently watching a Korean docuseries about the raincoat serial killer and the same kind of BS is happening in that investigation. Everybody's either lying or covering up stuff to protect honor and position. Hiding things from the public to make themselves look better which is something that happens all around the world but seems to be at a greater intensity in Asia. Everybody's cultural practices are different and in a case like this these behaviors could have made things much much worse

    • @lucacarbonaro2911
      @lucacarbonaro2911 2 роки тому +1

      no one had a single case of cancer caused by the radiation

  • @matthew-jy5jp
    @matthew-jy5jp 3 роки тому +23

    Frontline has the best journalist on 📺 today. Thank you.

  • @loranceb
    @loranceb Рік тому +7

    When the firefighter said” His wife cried, I almost cried.” That was crushing.

  • @Desttro73
    @Desttro73 3 роки тому +45

    They should've built those backup Generators on High Ground, not right by the Ocean.

    • @egtaha
      @egtaha 3 роки тому +5

      They should have called some Russians LOL

    • @Desttro73
      @Desttro73 3 роки тому +5

      @@egtaha Or Obi Wan Kenobi.

    • @DynamicSeq
      @DynamicSeq 3 роки тому +2

      @Allen Tokyo GE wanted to put them on the roof..But something with local noise regulations prevented that..

    • @mab9614
      @mab9614 3 роки тому +23

      When the plant’s location was first selected in the 60s, it was a cliff 33-35 meters above the ocean. GE then thought TEPCO would be built the plant on that cliff, so the placement of the backup diesel generators in the basement was alright. What GE didn’t anticipate was that TEPCO, in order to conserve construction money and ease construction difficulties, reduced the cliff from 35 meters to 10 meters above sea level.
      This documentary failed to mention TEPCO was actually wanted not once but at least three times about the inadequate safety measures against tsunami. A few months after the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami, TEPCO was warned that their sea wall was not high enough. In 2006, a group of researchers again warned TEPCO about their 5.5 meter high sea wall was not enough to stop a tsunami similar to the one in 2004. Finally, in 2009, a final warning was sent to TEPCO to raise their sea wall.
      They didn’t listen, and then Fukushima happened.

    • @YagiChanDan
      @YagiChanDan 3 роки тому

      Then the interconnects would have been washed away like all the other infrastructure.

  • @malectric
    @malectric 2 роки тому +28

    This one of the most chilling stories I've watched. 20/20 is a wonderful thing but the takeaway lesson has to be that in design you have to think of every possibility however unlikely. I feel sorry for everyone including the local population and plant workers. No-one can be blamed for a natural event that set a new record. only perhaps for thinking it could never happen and hence not considering the worse case when designing the plant. A lesson to us all and as a designer of electronic equipment, myself in particular although robustness in design is a personal philosophy which I've always tried to incorporate. It is principally about safety for others.

  • @manbehindthebeard3213
    @manbehindthebeard3213 2 роки тому +14

    Those men that went in are heros for sure. They put their lives in harm's way to save so many they didn't even know. The Japanese people have a resolve and moral code not even comparable to the rest of the world. Those men deserve some sort of reward for their gallantry. Like some kind of metal of honor, monetary compensation, and free heath care for them selves and family for the rest of their lives.

  • @lilyrrichard236
    @lilyrrichard236 Рік тому +6

    Mother nature likes to remind us who's in charge. We are merely guests on this amazing planet. Events like these are heartbreaking and humbling.

  • @goodcomps
    @goodcomps 2 роки тому +7

    To those men and women that risked their lives for the rest of the planet, thank you, from the very essence of my being. I appreciate your humanity and selflesness. There are not enough words in my vocabulary to make you undestand how greatful I am for your actions. May the rest of your life be filled with happieness and ease.

  • @wHw_Syxx
    @wHw_Syxx 3 роки тому +12

    That Frontline theme in the beginning of each episode just gets you so damned pumped! Been watching Frontline since I was a kid and I'm 33. Keep up the great work and never change that theme! Cheers.

  • @matthew-jy5jp
    @matthew-jy5jp 3 роки тому +54

    Soldiers everywhere are brave by their nature. We ask them to fight for us, we ask for their help during national travesties and disasters. They truly are the best of all of us. God bless all these people in 🇯🇵 who were so brave.

    • @hugovera1540
      @hugovera1540 3 роки тому +2

      what about the firefighters? they would not even tell their family. the pilot just wants a paycheck and ask for permission from his wife. He cant even make decision for himself. The military did not help cool down the reactor. It was those firefighters

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 3 роки тому +1

      The soldiers did not help much.
      It was the pump that the firefighters put in place and left running that saved the day, and likely Tokyo too.
      Unlike the reactor the “spent” fuel pool has practically no containment and after the explosions unit 4 pool was directly under the stars.

    • @anxiousearth680
      @anxiousearth680 3 роки тому

      @@pleiadiblu2365 Aren't those pools only dangerous if the water dries up?

    • @StrazdasLT
      @StrazdasLT 2 роки тому +1

      @@anxiousearth680 if they dry up and are not cooled after certain amount of time giving them a chance to heat up then they would be technically dangerous. But they are extremely easy to bury if it comes to that.

  • @ambition112
    @ambition112 Рік тому +152

    2:28: 🌊 The Fukushima nuclear disaster was caused by a powerful earthquake and tsunami that flooded the plant, leading to a meltdown.
    7:45: 🌊 The Fukushima nuclear plant faced a series of failures after being hit by a tsunami, leading to a potential explosion and the release of radioactivity.
    16:49: 😱 The prime minister orders the venting of the reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, risking the lives of workers to prevent a catastrophic explosion.
    25:00: ⚠ The Fukushima plant engineers feared that the reactor core had exploded, but it was actually a hydrogen explosion in the roof of the reactor building.
    32:51: 😰 The Fukushima Fifty, led by plant manager Yoshida, were locked down in the central control room as the radiation levels were dangerously high and the reactors were unmanned.
    40:12: ⚠ Firefighters risk their lives to spray water into the fuel pools at Fukushima Dai-ichi.
    47:43: 💔 The most dangerous phase of the crisis is over, but the prime minister resigns and TEPCO faces bankruptcy.
    Recap by Tammy AI

    • @Pepsipepper232
      @Pepsipepper232 Рік тому +2

      Thank you

    • @popokiobake
      @popokiobake 11 місяців тому

      No, not entirely true.
      Incompetence by TEPCO Executives were primarily to blame. Because the company was run by idiots.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 10 місяців тому +2

      Tepco and the banks financing it were saved with taxpayer money.
      Prime minister Kan was forced to resign as he was insisting on closing nuclear power plants, including the Omaezaki klunker.

  • @konaboss83
    @konaboss83 3 роки тому +14

    Frontline is always a good watch Prayers and best wishes to our Japanese friends

  • @cydkriletich6538
    @cydkriletich6538 2 роки тому +35

    God bless the brave people who risked their lives in order to stop further, utter disaster and loss of life. Mr. Norco, my heart goes out to you and your daughter, who is now, in 2022, a young woman, perhaps with children of her own. The world staggered at your loss and the devastation to Japan. I am heartened and amazed at the way in which the Japanese people have worked so hard to recover. Bless the people of Japan, and May you never face this sort of disaster again. 💟💐

  • @simpletownworx
    @simpletownworx 3 роки тому +61

    9:20 Tepco were warned in 2009 their tsunami defences were inadequate and this clown is saying the damage is something we could never have imagined? 🤔

    • @CoralineJonesPinkPalace
      @CoralineJonesPinkPalace 3 роки тому +8

      It's called not planning ahead for a natural disaster and cover-up.

    • @mobiuscoreindustries
      @mobiuscoreindustries 3 роки тому +8

      Plus engineers all the way back to the very design of the PWR noted it's reliance on water as a coolant and moderator was a dangerous design due to the need to pressurize it to keep it liquid. The guy who INVENTED the PWR always advocated for the liquid fuel, solid moderator, liquid salt thorium reactor that was literally incapable of meltdown and would not need to be pressurized.
      Remember at the time the first PWR had not been built yet, but the army had already made plans to use the uranium processing to make new nuclear weapons while the molten salt reactor would have been useless at making bombs. Having the creator of it say that "later down the line, there will be an accident" and advocate for a different solution was a bad thing so they suppressed him. He would always say that as a result of following his first designs, humanity had taken the wrong path to nuclear.
      One that was only saved form being forgotten because the data on the WORKING molten salt reactor experiment was rescued by a bunch of dudes as the pile of assessment pertaining to the technology were being literally put in the flame to free space for storage. Literally the solution to nuclear AND knocking down fossil fuels for good is staring at the face of the world and we are doing our best to ignore it.
      It's not fantasy tech like cold fusion, it's here, and it works. It's been demonstrated by the MSRE

    • @infini_ryu9461
      @infini_ryu9461 3 роки тому +2

      @@mobiuscoreindustries Except Fukushima Daiichi wasn't a PWR, but a BWR, a boiling water reactor.
      And how did I know you would be wanting to mention the MSR only a couple sentences in? lol

    • @mobiuscoreindustries
      @mobiuscoreindustries 3 роки тому

      @@infini_ryu9461 that is correct. I would say however that the distinction when it comes to the downsides remain the same. The reactor still uses water as a moderator and coolant, still use a pressure vessel, and is simply even more dependent on active cooling than a regular PWR.
      And what can I say? MSR are just the answer to the question of energy. In my mind the are the only proven baseload energy source that can be used everywhere and is cheap and reliable enough to knock out fuel lobbies right out of the picture, all the while guaranteeing a stable and scalable solution for centuries

    • @coache1nine
      @coache1nine 3 роки тому +1

      Sounds like Texas and their oil and gas lines, warned, but, meh

  • @archangelum
    @archangelum Рік тому +3

    One of the best Frontlines! What a harrowing story of Bravery and Perseverance!

  • @simonf1786
    @simonf1786 2 роки тому +73

    I worked at the nuclear plant in Ibaraki, a bit further south of Fukushima. Luckily it was not badly affected by the tsunami . I had left there one month before the tsunami. I did know many of the guys that risked their lives helping in the Fukushima disaster. So brave and so sad. Most of them had families. My heart will always go out for them.

    • @simonf1786
      @simonf1786 Рік тому

      @@transistor754 You write bull crap. You obviously do not understand Japan or the nuclear industry in Japan. Go and research properly before making pathetic statements.

    • @transistor754
      @transistor754 Рік тому

      @@simonf1786 2 minutes research and 30 seconds reading, do you think you can manage that?
      "Overcoming popular resistance" wikipedia "Nuclear Power in Japan". (I know... but it's all verifiable history)
      In 1954, the Operations Coordinating Board of the United States National Security Council proposed that the U.S. government undertake a "vigorous offensive" urging nuclear energy for Japan in order to overcome the widespread reluctance of the Japanese population to build nuclear reactors in the country. Thirty two million Japanese people, a third of the Japanese population, signed a petition calling for banning hydrogen bombs.[28] Journalist and author Foster Hailey wrote an op-ed piece published in The Washington Post where he called for adopting a proposal to build nuclear reactors in Japan, stating his opinion that: "Many Americans are now aware...that the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan was not necessary....How better to make a contribution to amends than by offering Japan...atomic energy."[29] For several years starting in 1954, the United States Central Intelligence Agency and other U.S. government agencies ran a propaganda war targeting the Japanese population to vanquish the Japanese people's opposition to nuclear power

    • @simonf1786
      @simonf1786 Рік тому +3

      @@transistor754 A gift 😅🤣 really, do you not know thar the Japanese have paid GE a great deal of money and continue to pay mow for servicing the sites. I know because I worked in the sites. How about you, did you only work behind your computer at your home or what are you?

    • @transistor754
      @transistor754 Рік тому

      @@simonf1786 I am a Licensed Radiation worker (20mSv) and I maintain a (small) 3MeV Linear Accelerator. I recently participated in a Neutron Bombardment Experiment. I still hold the Japanese were co-erced into Nuclear Power and "obliged" by the allies to pay for the GE (UK) installations, as the above article says, by the CIA and other interested parties. (They were on form even back then.) I understand that as a Nuclear Power Station worker you have a vested interest in making Nuclear Power look safe. My issue is not with the technology but with the mining, transportation and waste disposal of Nuclear Fuel and the proliferation thereof.

    • @simonf1786
      @simonf1786 Рік тому +2

      @@transistor754 The UK instillation is now off line permanently and has been shut down for many years. I do not hold that Japan was coerced into nuclear power. Indeed it was essential to rebuild Japan. If you ever lived in Japan, you would know that it is a very hot (no punt intended) topic and so many Japanese are scared of it, especially after the Fukushima disaster.

  • @michaelsowden5892
    @michaelsowden5892 3 роки тому +8

    On the night of the third anniversary of the quake and tsunami I flew down the coast of Japan from Vancouver Canada to Manila Philippines. It was a scary ominous sight on a clear night to see down 35,000 feet along a lit coastline until that region of Fukushima that was still a completely dark arc around the exclusion zone. Then lights again down to Tokyo bay. Only under 7 miles above it all in an airplane we could only imagine the courage and tragedy on the ground there.

  • @garyhooper1820
    @garyhooper1820 3 роки тому +9

    this video left me feeling very emotional, sorrow for so many lost, pride in the brave fighting an invisible enemy, anger toward management trying to cover their asses .

  • @Mental_Egg
    @Mental_Egg 3 роки тому +39

    Why was the backup generators located in a basement below sea-level? The plant was built next to the ocean? Genius engineering.

    • @FluffyFluffles
      @FluffyFluffles 3 роки тому +18

      And if they were built on ground level and then hit by an attack you'd be here calling them idiots for not putting them in the basement. Everything is obvious in hindsight.

    • @staciasmith5162
      @staciasmith5162 3 роки тому +4

      @@FluffyFluffles nah, hind sight my tukus. Building them on fault lines *at all* is plain stupid.

    • @phillipkalaveras1725
      @phillipkalaveras1725 3 роки тому +4

      @@FluffyFluffles Why bother putting the control room in an elevated earthquake-proof vault if the generators needed to run it are in the basement 50 feet from the most well-known seismically active tsunami-prone water on the planet?

    • @Goreuncle
      @Goreuncle 3 роки тому +1

      @@FluffyFluffles
      Sure, hindsight is 20/20, but still, the failure to place those generators in safe buildings was inexcusable.
      They had been warned about such dangers in the past. I seem to recall that an underground generator room had already experienced flooding at least once before 2011.

    • @Goreuncle
      @Goreuncle 3 роки тому +2

      @S P
      The plant was built next to the ocean because these old reactor designs need access to large quantities of water.
      Backup generators were still located below sea level because Tepco kept ignoring safety recommendations.
      I think they installed a reinforced door in one of the underground generator rooms, thinking it would be enough.
      It's bad enough that these old reactor designs (which lack passive cooling systems) are still in operation...
      If, on top of it, the managing companies fail to observe safety recommendations, they're basically digging their own graves.

  • @ryand141
    @ryand141 6 місяців тому +3

    I feel really sorry for Norio. Such a beautiful family that he lost and the impossible predicament he was in.

  • @labixiaoxin321
    @labixiaoxin321 2 роки тому +7

    Thank you, firefighters and workers. You saved the world

  • @Crystallized278
    @Crystallized278 3 роки тому +34

    I was in 12TH Grade and had Japanese Class that day when the earthquake and tsunami took place. For the rest of the semester, our instructor kept showing up news updates about the aftermath and the then-growing nuclear crisis. Having had a cousin who worked at Three Mile Island about fifteen years ago, and hearing the tale of what happened there and at Chernobyl from him and my own interest, I was appalled and deeply saddened.
    I am most sincerely glad Japan was able to cope with this tragedy so well. That is the way we need to handle the ongoing pandemic we are facing now.

    • @yesterdayitrained
      @yesterdayitrained 2 роки тому

      Bless you, truly.

    • @StrazdasLT
      @StrazdasLT 2 роки тому

      If you had a cousin that worked at TMI, then you know that TMI is a great example of how human engineering has compensated over the incompetence of the employees and the computer did its best to fight against human meddling and fixed the problem.

    • @rimrunz1795
      @rimrunz1795 Рік тому

      Blame, ostracizing, delusion and dissent are all that has come out of the attempts at management of corona, so far as i can see.
      Long, long way from Fukushima response.

    • @Junkinsally
      @Junkinsally Рік тому

      @@StrazdasLT -Oh please! Humans are incredibly arrogant. You can not "engineer out" ignorance!!! Hence why keep polluting our environment by using nuclear, among other things. Humanity has long, long way to go before becoming responsible mature people.

    • @7bam
      @7bam Рік тому

      I have a similar story. I was also in 12th grade when COVID happened. We kept reading articles as new updates came out over in Japan, before it had hit the US. It was pretty intense because everyone in my class could tell it was a matter of time before covid came over here.

  • @JamesSavik
    @JamesSavik 3 роки тому +24

    Please bear in mind what it took to take Fukushima down; one of the strongest earthquakes in recorded history, and then a tsunami.

    • @pleiadiblu2365
      @pleiadiblu2365 3 роки тому +2

      At Fukushima the quake was strong but not nearly as strong as the epicenter.

    • @cbx500cbx
      @cbx500cbx 3 роки тому

      Yup but now it's down what's gonna stop it.

    • @isaac7724
      @isaac7724 2 роки тому +3

      I interpret this comment as also a way of saying that people shouldn't condemn nuclear power, and to understand that it is a valuable energy source and is typically safe under most conditions. Especially if proper preventative precautions and planning is implemented.

    • @Dutch3DMaster
      @Dutch3DMaster 2 роки тому

      @@isaac7724 I have read it as this as well, people in my country tend to condemn it because of Chernobyl and Fukushima right after, completely ignoring that the type of reactor at Chernobyl was already falling from grace when it was built, because of it's reasonably unstable nature and the high amounts of fuel it required and high manufacturing costs due to the big containment vessel.
      With Fukushima people tend to conflate the people who lost their lives due to the tsunami with radiation deaths. Yes there could've been a global disaster if some things were not taken care off in the way they were, but even with everything that happened, no one directly died from radiation exposure like in Chernobyl.

  • @nuny313
    @nuny313 Рік тому +20

    This was a nightmare for so many people and for those who lost their loved ones I can even imagine how painful it had to be. My heart and prayers are with all those beautiful hard working people even though it’s been years since that happened I know for them it’s still clear in their memories like it just happen. God Bless them all.

  • @CrustyUgg
    @CrustyUgg 3 роки тому +11

    That was actually really smart..
    To get on your boat and head out to sea. I wouldn’t have even thought of that

  • @dfdemt
    @dfdemt 3 роки тому +11

    I can’t believe it’s already been 10 years since this happened.

  • @DanTaninecz
    @DanTaninecz 2 роки тому +7

    Mr. Kimura, from someone you'll never meet, thank you for your inspiring strength.

  • @bdmbpm1467
    @bdmbpm1467 2 роки тому +2

    The workers who stayed at the plant are heroic.