I take you up on this.
Normally when a nuclear plant is build very stringent material approval procedures, erection procedures, testing procedures etc need to be followed, both client and consultant oversee these steps and on occasion even reject materials, designs etc when they are not convinced of the suitability and quality.
Now, Tepco has this super emergency and observing the little bit that is being released, I often ask myself is this really nuclear appropriated or akin to a "farmer makes a plan", the first time this question i asked in
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3263462&postcount=4715"
The same question I ask with the installation of what is obvious second hand tanks (rust marks on the flanges). I stated earlier I can see no evidence of deep foundations (no excavation marks) just a leveling slab of concrete on the tarmac. Supposedly they will use similar temporary flexible pipes to pump contaminated water to these tanks. Furthermore these tanks are bottom filled (as per the drawing snippet), catastrophic result if failure in filling system.
I know it is easy to criticize sitting in an armchair and not being involved in the emergency team, but who is there to check hasty decisions in a situation that changes daily. Are apparently sub-standard solutions acceptable in a emergency situation - one can be lucky and it works however one can be equally unlucky and have great mess somewhere else.
I have worked for and with Japanese for more than 16 years and I have experienced a very narrow mindset when things do not run correctly in a project. Just solve this problem to the satisfaction of the client/consultant even if other things go wrong in the meantime, the other things the client has not realized and these can be fixed later quietly. This same mind set I experienced in a small scale I believe I am experiencing in a Mega-scale.
I would really like to see a new satellite view of Fukushima as a whole, only that way we can judge if things are happening on a grander scale or not.