ラベル After の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示
ラベル After の投稿を表示しています。 すべての投稿を表示

2011年9月23日金曜日

After a rocky start, the Nintendo 3DS is tops in Japan (Digital Trends)

Nintendo President Satoru Iwata must be breathing a sigh of relief. After a tough start for the Nintendo 3DS, the handheld hardware is showing steady growth, and is currently the most purchased piece of gaming hardware in Japan.

Following the release of the 3DS in Japan, the sales were encouraging. The device sold out 400,000 units, and despite slow software sales, things were looking good. Then the sales flatlined and it soon became apparent that longtime Nintendo fans were willing to try the new hardware, but it was not reaching the wider audiences that Nintendo had hoped for. So then came the price cuts.

Originally debuting at $249, the 3DS’ price was then cut 30-percent to $170, effective August 12. It attracted plenty of new fans, but also enraged those that paid the full price. Many felt that Nintendo was punishing them for their loyalty, something Iwata took very seriously. Iwata issued a personal apology to those fans, and offered them the Ambassador Program, featuring 20 Game Boy Advance and original NES games for free. The results were almost instant. 3DS sales exploded in Japan and Nintendo sold more than 215,000 units in a week—a steep increase from the 30,000 or so it was selling per week prior to that. The results were seen in North America too, where despite a major drop in industry sales in general, the 3DS saw a 260-percent increase.

A month later the sales seem to be remaining constantly strong, especially in Japan where the 3DS sold 58,837 units and led the week in hardware sales, according to figures compiled by Media Create and shared through Gamesindutry.biz. This isn’t the first time that the 3DS has been at the top, but it is the first time that it took the top spot without the benefit of having just launched, or the recent price drop. The sales appear to be steady, which is good news for Nintendo.

It is also somewhat telling that even with good hardware sales, the 3DS’ software sales are still suffering. With only one title in the top 10, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D (which is a remake to begin with), Nintendo must be concerned.

But there is good news on the horizon. Several major titles are due soon for the 3DS, including Super Mario 3D Land and Mario Kart 7. With the 3DS’ internal software finally caught up (Netflix is active, the e-Store is finally ramping up, etc.), the price at a point that people are accepting it and a handful of major titles on the way, the 3DS might finally have found its groove.


View the original article here

2011年9月14日水曜日

JR Hokkaido chief missing after leaving apparent suicide notes

JR Hokkaido chief missing after leaving apparent suicide notes Hokkaido Railway Co. President Naotoshi Nakajima has been missing since Monday morning after leaving apparent suicide notes, railway officials said. People close to Nakajima asked the police to start a search for him, JR Hokkaido said. Several notes were left in his house for members of his family, friends and workers at JR Hokkaido, railway officials said at a news conference.
13 Sep Tsuyoshi Kawana, former leader of a large bosozoku gang, was arrested yesterday in the Azabu Juban district of Tokyo's Minato Ward for an assault that took place four months ago, reports Sports Hochi (Sept. 13). Kawana was taken into custody by members of the Azabu division of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police for inflicting injuries requiring two to three weeks to heal to the head of an acquaintance inside a nightclub in the Roppongi entertainment district at around 3 a.m. on May 8. The 40-year-old Kawana was previously involved in the drunken rampage of Mongolian-born former sumo yokozuna Asashoryu that occurred in January of last year, just before the grand champion's retirement from the sport. (Tokyo Reporter)
12 Sep Across from a noodle shop in a Yokohama suburb, Hisayoshi Teramura's inn looks much like any other small lodging that dots the port city. Occasionally, it's even mistaken for a love hotel by couples hankering for some time beneath the sheets. But Teramura's place is neither a love nest nor a pit stop for tired travelers. The white and grey tiled building is a corpse hotel, its 18 deceased guests tucked up in refrigerated coffins. "We tell them we only have cold rooms," Teramura quips when asked how his staff respond to unwary lovers looking for a room. The daily rate at Lastel, as it is known, is 12,000 yen ($157). For that fee, bereaved families can check in their dead while they wait their turn in the queue for one of the city's overworked crematoriums. (Reuters)
12 Sep Two Japanese teenagers, Shota Sometani and Fumi Nikaido, won the Marcello Mastroianni Award for best young actor and actress at the 68th Venice International Film Festival on Saturday for their performance in the Japanese film "Himizu" directed by Sion Sono. Sometani, 19, and Nikaido, 16, became the first Japanese actor and actress to take home the prize, which was created in 1998. At press conference in Tokyo on Sunday, the actors expressed their joy at receiving the award. (Japan Times)
12 Sep Former Morning Musume member Ai Kago was found in her Tokyo apartment yesterday after an apparent suicide attempt, reports daily tabloid Sports Hochi (Sept. 12). Tokyo Metropolitan Police reported that medical personnel were alerted to Kago's apartment, located in the Roppongi area of Minato Ward, just before noon on Monday after members of the 23-year-old's management agency discovered her on the floor with her wrists cut. She was transferred to a local hospital, where she is now recovering. The one-time member of the popular idol group also seemed to be suffering from an overdose of tranquilizers, police said. (Tokyo Reporter)
12 Sep Even before the March 11 earthquake and tsunami struck knocking out the Fukushima nuclear plant, Aya's life was a struggle. She had divorced her abusive husband and was left on her own to care and provide for her two daughters. Now, six months after she fled her home just 9 km (6 miles) away from the radiation-spewing plant, the 26-year old single mother is barely surviving. She has no job, languishes in hiding from her violent ex-husband in temporary housing and will probably never see her home again. (Reuters)

View the original article here

Six months after Japan's tsunami, residents worry their plight is fading from view (video) (The Christian Science Monitor)

Minami-Sanriku, Japan – As memorial services were held across the northeast coastal regions to mark six months since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, recovery from the vast disaster is proving to be painfully slow in many places.

Some of the worst-hit towns still resemble wasteland. More than 80,000 people remain in temporary accommodation. The nuclear crisis at Fukushima triggered by the tsunami is ongoing, and the new industry minister resigned over the weekend after making disparaging comments about the city.

“We pray for the lost lives and for the missing to be found as early as possible. We hope that people can return to this town and we can hear cheerful voices again,â€

RELATED: IN PICTURES: Japan's nuclear fallout

Mr. Sato had been in the town hall along with 130 staff when the tsunami struck. He was one of only 10 survivors when the 50-ft. waves came across the roof of the building and washed away 20 of the 30 people who had made it that far.

Most of the residents of the town returned for the service from other areas, as Minami-Sanriku remains largely uninhabitable. Thousands of tons of debris were piled into mountains of wood, earth, metal, and concrete along the waterfront.

A boat rests on the second floor of the former city hospital, facing away from the sea, where the tsunami deposited it as the huge wave pulled back to where it came from after obliterating 95 percent of the town.

Related video:

newslook

Recognizing sacrifices Red steel girders are all that is left of the town’s disaster response center where a young local government worker, Miki Endo, famously stayed at her post sounding an alarm and urging residents to evacuate, until the tsunami engulfed the building and she went missing.

People came from as far as Tokyo to pay their respects at the small makeshift shrine that has appeared in the shell of the building, dedicated to Ms. Endo’s sacrifice. Some residents of Minami-Sanriku want the remains of the building to be turned into a permanent monument to her heroism.

A cluster of 20 prefab housing units behind the Bayside Arena, where Sunday morning’s service was held, is now home to a fraction of the town’s people who lost their homes on March 11.

Kaeko Gyoba was in a club for Minami-Sanriku’s elderly residents with her husband when the earthquake struck. They made it up to the fourth floor and were spared as the waves swept through the three stories below, but left the building standing when the waves receded. It was one of the few buildings spared in the entire town.

“We spent two nights up there until a Self-Defense Force helicopter was able to land at the elementary school nearby and get us out,” says Ms. Gyoba.She stayed with relatives near Tokyo after the disaster, but she returned last month to be with the rest of her family, who now occupy five of the small, flimsy-looking temporary houses.

“It’s very tough living here, I just can’t get used to it. There’s nowhere in the town to shop, you need a car to go anywhere, and I worry how cold it will be in the winter,” says Gyoba. “And none of the family have jobs now. They all worked on the ocean, farming seaweed and oysters. Everything was swept away.”

Fading from public consciousness? Despite the nationwide attention that the six-month memorials have been receiving, some of those still struggling to put their lives back together feel they are gradually fading from people’s consciousness in the rest of the country. There is also anger at politicians in Tokyo who they see as more concerned with partisan fighting than focusing on helping the region’s recovery.

Even the leadership contest to replace former Prime Minister Naoto Kan – heavily criticized for his handling of the crisis – was seen as a self-indulgent distraction by many in the region. His replacement, Yoshihiko Noda, has already lost his trade and industry minister, only eight days after being sworn in.

On his first visit to the disaster zone last week, Trade Minister Yoshio Hachiro joked with a reporter accompanying him on the trip about infecting him with radiation by wiping his jacket on the journalist after coming out of the no-go zone around the Fukushima nuclear plant. The minister went on to describe the area around the stricken facility as, “really like a town of death.”

Hachiro’s behavior provoked outrage not just among residents of Fukushima, but across Japan’s north-east coast. For many, the minister’s attitude betrayed a lack of real empathy from Tokyo politicians with the victims of the triple disasters, and his tearful apology afterward convinced few.

Get daily or weekly updates from CSMonitor.com delivered to your inbox. Sign up today.


View the original article here

2011年9月13日火曜日

After Fukushima, mother fights to get her life back

FUKUSHIMA PREFECTURE, Japan (Reuters) – Even before the March 11 earthquake and tsunami struck knocking out the Fukushima nuclear plant, Aya's life was a struggle.

She had divorced her abusive husband and was left on her own to care and provide for her two daughters.

Now, six months after she fled her home just 9 km (6 miles) away from the radiation-spewing plant, the 26-year old single mother is barely surviving. She has no job, languishes in hiding from her violent ex-husband in temporary housing and will probably never see her home again.

"It feels like a hole has opened inside me. My home was so important to me and I felt safe there," said Aya who would not give her family name or disclose her exact location out of fear her ex-husband could find her.

"It's like time has just stopped. Ever since March 11, the time has stopped for me."

The tsunami left 20,000 dead or missing, set off the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl a quarter of a century ago and forced 80,000 to evacuate.

It hit particularly hard those who were already down on their luck. There were reports of lone deaths in temporary housing and suicide rates jumped in the quake-battered regions.

After the disaster Aya was evacuated to a nearby gymnasium, but could not stay there as Noa - her younger four-year-old daughter - cannot walk because of a split spine and needs special care. The older, six-year-old Kurea has no disabilities and goes to school.

"Noa's father then called and we went to Saitama (north of Tokyo). He said the hospitals were up and running there, so I decided to do it for Noa's sake," says Aya as she puts braces around her younger daughter's legs as they prepare for a trip to the kindergarten.

"He soon started beating us up. It was so insane, I just had to flee again. Ignoring the risk of radiation I came back up to Fukushima prefecture," says Aya, zipping her daughter's backpack.

She now lives in a modest apartment in one of the prefecture's bigger cities sharing the fate of the tens of thousands that six months after the disaster still do not have a permanent home.

About 10,000 still live in evacuation shelters, 34,000 stay in hotels or with relatives or friends and 40,000 live in temporary housing.

ANXIETY

"I also lost my job as an insurance agent as my company moved to a different town," says Aya. With her daughter in kindergarten, she goes job hunting and says any job that would let her check on Noa from time to time will do.

Landing a job is tough, though, as the influx of evacuees from the tsunami-hit areas doubled the number of job-seekers in the Fukushima prefecture.

Like other evacuees, she blames the government for dragging its feet on mapping out the area's future.

Only last week, Tokyo said it would aim to halve radiation over two years in places contaminated by the nuclear disaster, removing soil, plants and trees in an area spanning thousands of square km. But it is not clear when, if ever, the evacuees will be able to return home.

"I want them to come out into the open and to say it clearly: you will or will not be able to go back to your place. If not, I want them to tell me what am I, and thousands of other people, supposed to do," says Aya in a trembling voice.

"I have to wonder if I'll be able to build my life here. I just can't even begin to think about what to do in the future."

(Editing by Tomasz Janowski and Jonathan Thatcher)


View the original article here

After Fukushima, mother fights to get her life back (Reuters)

FUKUSHIMA PREFECTURE, Japan (Reuters) – Even before the March 11 earthquake and tsunami struck knocking out the Fukushima nuclear plant, Aya's life was a struggle.

She had divorced her abusive husband and was left on her own to care and provide for her two daughters.

Now, six months after she fled her home just 9 km (6 miles) away from the radiation-spewing plant, the 26-year old single mother is barely surviving. She has no job, languishes in hiding from her violent ex-husband in temporary housing and will probably never see her home again.

"It feels like a hole has opened inside me. My home was so important to me and I felt safe there," said Aya who would not give her family name or disclose her exact location out of fear her ex-husband could find her.

"It's like time has just stopped. Ever since March 11, the time has stopped for me."

The tsunami left 20,000 dead or missing, set off the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl a quarter of a century ago and forced 80,000 to evacuate.

It hit particularly hard those who were already down on their luck. There were reports of lone deaths in temporary housing and suicide rates jumped in the quake-battered regions.

After the disaster Aya was evacuated to a nearby gymnasium, but could not stay there as Noa - her younger four-year-old daughter - cannot walk because of a split spine and needs special care. The older, six-year-old Kurea has no disabilities and goes to school.

"Noa's father then called and we went to Saitama (north of Tokyo). He said the hospitals were up and running there, so I decided to do it for Noa's sake," says Aya as she puts braces around her younger daughter's legs as they prepare for a trip to the kindergarten.

"He soon started beating us up. It was so insane, I just had to flee again. Ignoring the risk of radiation I came back up to Fukushima prefecture," says Aya, zipping her daughter's backpack.

She now lives in a modest apartment in one of the prefecture's bigger cities sharing the fate of the tens of thousands that six months after the disaster still do not have a permanent home.

About 10,000 still live in evacuation shelters, 34,000 stay in hotels or with relatives or friends and 40,000 live in temporary housing.

ANXIETY

"I also lost my job as an insurance agent as my company moved to a different town," says Aya. With her daughter in kindergarten, she goes job hunting and says any job that would let her check on Noa from time to time will do.

Landing a job is tough, though, as the influx of evacuees from the tsunami-hit areas doubled the number of job-seekers in the Fukushima prefecture.

Like other evacuees, she blames the government for dragging its feet on mapping out the area's future.

Only last week, Tokyo said it would aim to halve radiation over two years in places contaminated by the nuclear disaster, removing soil, plants and trees in an area spanning thousands of square km. But it is not clear when, if ever, the evacuees will be able to return home.

"I want them to come out into the open and to say it clearly: you will or will not be able to go back to your place. If not, I want them to tell me what am I, and thousands of other people, supposed to do," says Aya in a trembling voice.

"I have to wonder if I'll be able to build my life here. I just can't even begin to think about what to do in the future."

(Editing by Tomasz Janowski and Jonathan Thatcher)


View the original article here

2011年9月8日木曜日

BOJ stays on hold after Swiss move (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan kept its policy settings unchanged on Wednesday, saving up its scant ammunition for later, while the yen stabilized in the wake of Switzerland's radical action to curb its soaring currency.

But growing uncertainty over the global outlook and the Swiss move to set a ceiling for its currency against the euro keeps pressure on the Japanese central bank to take further action in coming months to prevent a renewed yen spike from derailing a fragile economic recovery.

Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said the BOJ should be mindful of heightening global economic uncertainty and the potential harm the stubbornly strong yen could have on corporate morale, signaling his readiness to ease policy again to support growth.

But he countered criticism that the BOJ was not doing enough compared with its U.S. and European counterparts, ahead of his visit to France for a weekend Group of Seven gathering where the need for further monetary stimulus may be discussed.

"We eased monetary policy at last month's rate review because we thought we needed to be mindful of downside risks. We acted pre-emptively taking into account various uncertainties," Shirakawa told a news conference.

"We don't feel that we didn't do anything today. Instead, we feel that we are proceeding with powerful monetary easing."

As expected, the BOJ kept its policy rate at a range of zero to 0.1 percent by a unanimous vote and held off on additional monetary easing steps.

The decision sparked a brief yen rally against the dollar on disappointment by some market players who had bet the BOJ would follow Switzerland with measures to counter yen rises.

The central bank maintained its view that Japan's economy will resume a moderate recovery later this year with growth picking up on increases in output and exports.

It also stressed that core consumer inflation will remain near zero for the time being and reassured markets that it will keep rates virtually at zero until price stability is foreseen.

"As the BOJ clearly sees the economy picking up steadily, the central bank doesn't see a need to take immediate action," said Junko Nishioka, chief Japan economist at RBS Securities.

PRESSURE ON BOJ

Switzerland's move on Tuesday to set a ceiling for the soaring franc's exchange rate raised the possibility that some of the safe-haven inflows into the Swiss currency could shift to the yen, driving it again toward record highs.

That would pressure the BOJ to loosen policy further.

The BOJ had already eased policy last month by adding a further 10 trillion yen ($130 billion) to its pool of funds for asset buying and fixed-rate market operations. Any future easing would take the form of further increases in the scheme.

"The BOJ probably opted to wait until they see how this month's FOMC affects markets and until the new government sets the tone on what it wants from the BOJ," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute in Tokyo.

"But the bank could prove to be too late in its action as the yen is prone to resume rises after the Swiss National Bank's decision."

The BOJ has plenty of reasons to save up ammunition for later. The European Central Bank may signal halting its rate tightening cycle at a meeting on Thursday while the Federal Reserve is seen adding monetary stimulus on September 20-21, which could again weaken the dollar.

There is also no guarantee that easing now would stave off political pressure for more action in October, when debate on how to pay for post-quake reconstruction starts in earnest under new premier Yoshihiko Noda.

NO QUICK FIX

Growing fears that the world economy may slip back into recession are piling pressure on G7 finance chiefs, who gather in Marseilles on Friday. The discussion is expected to center on whether there was wiggle room to ease up on austerity drives in some rich economies while boosting monetary stimulus.

But with monetary conditions already ultra-loose and its huge public debt limiting room for fiscal stimulus, Japan is left with few options to bolster an export-reliant economy vulnerable to sharp rises in the yen.

Shirakawa said there were limits to what more advanced nations could do in terms of fiscal and monetary stimulus, and warned of the drawbacks to keeping ultra-low rates for too long such as sowing the seeds of another asset bubble.

"Monetary policy may be able to ease the pain from balance sheet adjustments. But the adjustment from past excesses itself will not disappear," he said, calling for the need for patient reforms to fix structural problems plaguing each economy.

($1 = 77.115 Japanese Yen)

(Additional reporting by Rie Ishiguro, Stanley White and Kaori Kaneko; Writing by Leika Kihara and Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Kim Coghill)


View the original article here

More than 100 dead or missing after Japan typhoon - AFP

More than 100 dead or missing after Japan typhoon(AFP) – 6 hours ago 

TOKYO — A deadly typhoon has left at least 100 people dead or missing after ravaging western Japan, officials said, heaping yet more misery onto a nation trying to recover from the March tsunami.

Talas brought torrential rain and strong winds when it made landfall Saturday, swelling rivers and triggering landslides that swept away buildings in the southwestern island of Shikoku, Kii peninsula and the Chugoku region.

At least 50 people have been confirmed dead in nine prefectures.

With more than 50 people still missing, the storm looks likely to be Japan's deadliest since October 1979, when a powerful typhoon claimed 115 lives, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

In hard-hit Wakayama alone, 35 were killed and 33 remain unaccounted for, officials said.

Talas, which moved away from Japan on Sunday, has since been downgraded to a tropical storm but the remnants of its weather system, together with the offshore northbound Typhoon Noru, continued to inflict heavy rains on northern Japan.

Heavy rains brought more misery across a nation trying to recover from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, with a 56-year-old man having drowned in Saitama prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, officials said on Wednesday.

In Nara, local police and rescuers found one body buried in mud on Wednesday morning, which raised the death toll to five in a prefecture where many more are missing, a local police officer said.

Massive landslides since the weekend had cut off access routes to thousands living in mountainous communities, but local officials said rescuers have managed to provide supplies to many places.

In Wakayama prefecture, the number of stranded had been reduced from around 4,500 to 225, largely due to the restoration of access roads, a local government official said.

New Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who was sworn in last week, plans to visit the affected areas on Friday to inspect the typhoon damage.

Noda will also visit Fukushima on Thursday, home to a nuclear plant crippled by the March 11 disaster at the centre of the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved. More »


View the original article here

2011年9月6日火曜日

Anti-nuclear songs spread in Japan after crisis

Tokyo - In Japan, anti-nuclear songs have become popular among activists and young people in the wake of the nation's worst atomic accident.


 

Songs protesting against nuclear power are played at rallies and on YouTube, while the music industry and television and radio stations largely ignore them.


Female rapper Coma-chi's 'Say 'No!'' criticizes the mainstream media and government leaders for downplaying the risks of the disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station.


The plant has leaked radioactive material since it was hit by the March earthquake and tsunami.


'Media and higher-ups, please tell only the truth without holding back any information. Even if life is in danger, you don't say anything. The world is disgusted,' Coma-chi sings.


'If you are a father of someone, please feel citizens' anger. You say invisible harm does not pose immediate health risks, but it is harmful.'


In early May, Coma-chi travelled to areas near the 20-kilometre no-go zone around the nuclear plant to bring money and everyday commodities to locals and also performed live.


Another popular anti-nuclear song that also attracted hundreds of thousands of viewers on the internet is 'You Can't See It. You Can't Smell It, Either' by veteran reggae artist Rankin Taxi.


The song describes how radioactive material inflicts indiscriminate damage.


'Nobody can run from it, smell it and see it,' he intones.


'Safety myth ended in Fukushima,' the singer criticizes electric companies and government officials who repeatedly told the public that nuclear power was safe.


The crisis also prompted pop star Kazuyoshi Saito to rework his 2010 hit 'I Always Loved You,' renaming it 'It Was Always a Lie.'


'Textbooks and commercials were saying, 'It's safe. It's safe.' They deceived us. And their excuse was 'It was beyond the scope of the assumption',' Saito sings.


The song was deleted immediately as his record label, whose parent company is a major electric-appliance maker, requested the site operator remove it.


The original 'I Always Loved You' was also a commercial song for major cosmetic company Shiseido Co.


The record label said the new video was recorded 'for private use,' but it 'was leaked in a way Saito did not intend,' the major daily Asahi reported.


However, copies can be still seen on YouTube and featured at anti-nuclear rallies.


Anti-nuclear songs are not new. Two years after the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in the then-Soviet Union, Kiyoshiro Imawano, one of the nation's leading rock stars, produced two songs in his album 'Clover' that criticized utilities, media and government.


After his record label Toshiba EMI refused to release the songs, the album was sold through another company. Toshiba EMI, whose parent corporation built nuclear stations, explained its decision in a newspaper advertisement, saying the songs were 'too great to release,' Asahi reported.


The Fukushima disaster, however, has led more people to listen to Imawano on the internet and also rekindled the legacy of the rocker who died in 2009.


'We have too much electricity. We don't need nuclear power,' Imawano sang.


View the original article here

2011年9月2日金曜日

U.S. nuclear regulator eyes to-do list after Fukushima (Reuters)

By Roberta Rampton and Emily Stephenson Roberta Rampton And Emily Stephenson – Wed Aug 31, 3:35 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. nuclear regulator is refining a plan to change its rules for power plants following Japan's Fukushima disaster, selecting half a dozen high-priority items to tackle first, senior staff said.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is sorting through how to update its requirements for plants to withstand earthquakes, floods and other natural disasters -- a detailed and involved process expected to take years.

The first changes likely will include requiring operators of the country's 104 reactors to take a new look at the risks posed by earthquakes and floods.

"The full re-analysis that's proposed ... will take some time," said Amy Cubbage, who was part of an NRC taskforce that compiled a list of changes for U.S. reactors after a quake and tsunami in March overwhelmed the Fukushima Daiichi plant, causing the world's worst nuclear disaster in 25 years.

By October 3, NRC staff will advise the five-member commission on logistics for the changes and how to weave in input from the industry, the public and an advisory committee.

Senior staff discussed the changes with industry and nuclear critics at a public meeting on Wednesday.

Seismic risks in the United States were highlighted last week by an earthquake in Virginia that may have shaken Dominion Resources' North Anna plant more severely than the facility was designed to withstand.

"We need to look and see if we can learn lessons from anything that's happened, whether it was the earthquake in Japan, or whether it was even the earthquake under Lake Anna," Timothy Greten, a policy specialist at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said at the NRC meeting.

WITHOUT UNNECESSARY DELAY

NRC staff proposed the agency move forward on ordering upgrades to reactors with designs similar to the Fukushima plant and improvements for pools that store radioactive spent fuel.

The agency thinks the changes can move forward "without unnecessary delay" but gave no more specific timeline.

Other items identified by the NRC's Fukushima taskforce will need further study in a longer-term review, including its top recommendation to overhaul the "patchwork" of rules and guidelines into a more streamlined regulatory structure.

It will take years for the agency to adjust its regulations and for the industry to implement the changes. NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko has urged that the work be complete within five years, which would be an accelerated timetable for the agency.

SEISMIC RISK REVIEW PROPOSED

Separately, the NRC on Wednesday said it would require that plants evaluate their seismic risk, part of a process that started years before the Fukushima disaster.

"In view of the potential safety significance of this issue, it is necessary to reexamine the level of conservatism in the determination of original seismic design estimates," the NRC said in a Federal Register notice.

While there is no "imminent risk" from the design of aging plants, there is higher earthquake hazard in parts of the central and eastern United States than was assumed when they were first designed, the NRC said.

(Editing by Dale Hudson)


View the original article here

AP-GfK Poll: Japanese distrust govt after disaster (AP)

TOKYO – This year's tsunami and nuclear disasters have severely shaken the Japanese public's confidence in their government, and many are pessimistic about the country's future, an Associated Press-GfK poll has found.

The results released Thursday also show that Japanese generally distrust their leaders and that nearly 60 percent believe the country is heading in the wrong direction — a sobering welcome for Japan's new Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, elected this week.

Five months after the triple catastrophes — the March 11 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident — nearly three-quarters of the people lack confidence in the government's ability to handle another major disaster. Eighty percent felt deeply that leaders were not telling them the truth about the crises, and a slight majority want to reduce the number of nuclear reactors in the nation.

Overall, Japanese are gloomy about the state of their country, currently and in the future.

Nearly two-thirds believe Japan is a weaker international power than it was 10 years ago, and a startling 84 percent of respondents believe the economy, overtaken by China's to slide to third globally, is in poor shape. Some 44 percent believe children born today will be worse off when they grow up than people are now.

That pessimism reflects the complex mix of problems and attitudes confronting Noda as he replaces Naoto Kan, whose 15-month tenure ended amid widespread criticism of his administration's handling of the disasters.

Some 100,000 residents from around the damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant remain dislocated with no clear idea when they will be able to return to their homes. Residents in the scores of towns and villages along the tsunami-wracked northeastern coast are still cleaning up and fault the central government for being preoccupied with the nuclear crisis.

Tokyo Electric Power Co., owner of the plant, received a harsh assessment, with 8 in 10 people disapproving of its response to the disaster, while Kan and the nuclear safety agency got thumbs down from three-quarters of respondents.

However, the Japanese military, which mobilized quickly in relief work after the tsunami, got positive reviews from 9 out of 10 people, the AP-GfK poll found.

Since the March 11 disasters, some 82 percent doubted the government's ability to help them in the event of such an emergency — cited as a deep feeling by 82 percent. Three quarters reported feeling generally less safe than before March 11, and two-thirds were angry that relief was slow in reaching victims.

Americans' emotions following Hurricane Katrina and the flooding of New Orleans were less intense and focused more on anger (67 percent reporting this as a deep feeling) than fears for their personal safety, cited by 30 percent, or doubts about the government's ability to help them in a disaster (44 percent).

The widespread disappointment reflected in the poll is "sad, but it shows that people are looking at things honestly" and that they believe the response to the disasters "has been unsatisfactory," said Tetsuro Kato, a political science professor at Waseda University.

"The disasters could have been used to chart a new direction" for Japan and its leaders, "but that didn't happen," Kato said. "It was a missed opportunity."

"Some probably want to scream," Kato said.

The Fukushima accident has triggered debate in Japan about the future role of nuclear power in this earthquake-prone nation, which got 30 percent of its electricity from atomic power plants before the accident. The government has since scrapped its plan to boost that level to 50 percent by 2030.

The poll found that few in Japan have confidence in the nation's nuclear power plants — only 5 percent were either extremely or very confident, while 60 percent had little or no confidence.

A slight majority, 55 percent, want to reduce the number of atomic power plants, while 35 percent would like to leave the number about the same. Four percent want an increase while 3 percent want to eliminate them entirely.

Overall, 59 percent felt the country was headed in the wrong direction, while 63 percent believe Japan's international power is weaker than 10 years ago.

"From abroad, Japan appears to be turning inward," said Kato, who was in the U.S. last week. He also bemoaned the lack of robust debate about the nuclear crisis in the brief campaign among candidates who fought to replace Kan — a race Noda won.

Still, on a personal level a majority of Japanese, or 56 percent, say they are happy with the way things are going in their lives. Just 11 percent consider themselves mostly unhappy, while a third are neither happy or unhappy.

More women say they are happy than men (65 percent versus 47 percent). Married people also say they are happier than singles (60 percent versus 47 percent).

The AP-GfK telephone poll conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications surveyed 1,000 adults across Japan between July 29 and Aug. 10, and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

Recovery from the quake and tsunami is clearly viewed as the top priority for the nation, cited as the most important goal Japan over the next 10 years by nearly all surveyed. Nine in 10 said recovering from events of March 11 was the most serious problem facing the country.

The aging population was viewed as the second most serious problem, cited by 78 percent as either very or extremely serious.

Third was the lack of a stable government, cited by nearly three-quarters — highlighted by Noda's recent appointment as the sixth prime minister in five years.

But respondents were divided over whether they favored a fixed four-year term for the prime minister, similar to the U.S. president. Thirty percent favored such a change, while 31 percent opposed it, and 38 percent took neither stance.

No branch of the government has the trust of a majority to do the right thing most of the time. Sixty-five percent trust the parliament to do so less than half the time, and 59 percent hold that view of the Cabinet.

Also, a whopping 85 percent say elected officials are more interested in serving special interests than the people they represent.

On the economic front, 70 percent said conditions are worse today than five years ago, and about a third predicted that they would be worse five years from now — although 42 percent believed they would be about the same.

As in the U.S., the Japanese rate their own personal finances more highly than the nation's economy.

Still, just 19 percent rate their finances as excellent or in good shape, 53 percent say they are fair and 28 percent say they are poor. About a third say their family's financial health has declined in the last five years, 13 percent think it's gotten better and 52 percent say it's held steady.

____

On the Web: http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com


View the original article here

2011年8月31日水曜日

Japan school still serving as shelter six months after disaster

ISHINOMAKI, Japan — Children with backpacks full of books and pencils still walk across the playground each morning at Watanoha Elementary School.

But 5 1/2 months after their homes were destroyed by a horrific tsunami, the half-dozen kids are living in the school with their families rather than studying or playing there.

Principal Yoshiki Takahashi, who remains in charge of the facility, said the students are bused to two other schools in the battered fishing town while officials decide what to do with the elementary school turned shelter.

In the weeks following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, the school was struggling to feed about 1,200 residents who were staying there when top U.S. military officials and U.S. Ambassador to Japan John Roos visited. As of last week, there were still 99 men, women and children living in classrooms and the school gymnasium while they waited for temporary housing.

Takahashi said the facility’s electricity supply is still erratic, and the building’s water purifier is broken. The evacuees bathe in plastic shower blocks and go to the toilet in temporary toilets set up in a playground that was cleared of piles of rotting trash and twisted metal by U.S. troops.

“The people who are still here have not got a house to move into yet,” he said. “There are not enough temporary homes built.”

The school — in the heart of a ravaged neighborhood where U.S. forces cleared debris during March and April — is still surrounded by hundreds of battered, often empty homes and vacant lots where a wrecking ball finished what the tsunami started.

Children from Watanoha will soon move to a temporary school that is expected to open next month, Takahashi said. Last year, 410 children attended the elementary school.

“We don’t know when or if they kids will come back here,” he said. “That is up to Ishinomaki City.”

Most of the students are living with relatives or in temporary homes, said Takahashi, whose sons are helping rebuild his own home.

Rie Masuno, 30, said she rushed to the school after the Earthquake to check on her three children. When the tsunami came, they took shelter in a classroom and they never left.

Each day, Masuno’s children pack their bags and bus to another school while her construction worker husband heads out to help rebuild his shattered hometown.

“There is a lot of work for him these days,” she said.

Life at the shelter was tough at first, but the family has gotten used to it, Masuno said.

The children have fond memories of playing with the U.S. servicemembers who came to clean up the school. One gave her youngest child a teddy bear, she said.

However, the Masunos are eager to move into a temporary home that they expect to receive next month, she said.

“It’s been six months here,” she said. “I have been having fun with the other people we have lived with, but it is probably better for the kids to have their own home.”

Takahashi said his students’ parents would like to return to live on the sites of their original homes and they want to see a plan from local government officials for reconstruction in the area.

“If the school is going to reopen they would like to make plans to come back to this area, he said. “The problem now is that, as time goes by, people want to know when things are going to happen and they want more information.”

The government hasn’t produced a plan for reconstruction of the area yet, he said.

Officials at the Ishinomaki City reconstruction division said a plan for the Watanoha district will be included in one for the entire city’s reconstruction expected out in November.

They said information about the plan as decisions are made are posted on Ishonomaki city website. Officials said that measures to guard against future tsunamis, as well as how much financial support the Japanese government provide have yet to be decided.

“Personally, I want the government to put more effort into reconstruction and work a lot faster,” Takahashi said.

robsons@pstripes.osd.mil


View the original article here

2011年8月30日火曜日

Greenpeace: Fukushima schools unsafe after clean-up - Reuters

By Natalia Konstantinovskaya

TOKYO | Mon Aug 29, 2011 6:08am EDT

TOKYO Aug 29 (Reuters) - Greenpeace said on Monday that schools and surrounding areas located 60 km (38 miles) from Japan's tsunami-hit nuclear power plant were unsafe for children, showing radiation readings as much as 70 times internationally accepted levels.

The environmental group took samples at and near three schools in Fukushima city, well outside the 20 km exclusion zone from Tokyo Electric Power's stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex in Japan's northeast.

"No parent should have to choose between radiation exposure and education for their child," said Kazue Suzuki, Greenpeace Japan's anti-nuclear project head.

The government had already taken steps to decontaminate schools in Fukushima prefecture, where the crippled plant has been leaking radiation since it was hit by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

Calling the measures "deplorably late and inadequate," Greenpeace said it had found average dose rates above the maximum allowed under international standards, of 1 millisievert per year, or 0.11 microsievert per hour.

Japan's education ministry on Friday set a looser standard, allowing up to 1 microsievert per hour of radiation in schools.

Greenpeace said that inside a high school it tested, the reading was 0.5 microsievert per hour, breaching international standards even after the government's clean-up.

At a staircase connecting a school playground to the street, it found radiation amounting to 7.9 microsieverts per hour, or about 70 times the maximum allowed, exceeding even Japan's own standard.

Greenpeace urged the government to delay reopening the schools as planned on Sept. 1 after the summer break and relocate children in the most affected cities until decontamination was complete.

Fukushima city dismissed Greenpeace's calls, saying the schools were safe under the government's norms.

"We're finished decontaminating the schools, and they no longer have high radiation levels," city official Yoshimasa Kanno said. He added that postponing the opening of more than 100 schools in the city based on Greenpeace's findings of "only three" would be unreasonable.

RADIATION TO PERSIST FOR YEARS

Despite the government's reassurances, parents have removed thousands of children from schools in Fukushima since the disasters, fearing damage to their health.

Underscoring such concerns, the government said this month that 45 percent of children living outside the evacuation zone in Fukushima were exposed to low levels of radiation though it was within safety levels.

Greenpeace, which took its samples Aug. 17-19, did not say how long it might take to rid the areas of harmful levels of radiation.

But Jan van de Putte, its radiation expert, noted that cleaning up in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, about 100 km from Chernobyl, required hundreds of thousands of workers toiling over several months.

A vast area is still uninhabitable around the Chernobyl plant 25 years after the world's worst nuclear disaster, and experts have estimated Japan's decontamination efforts could cost as much as 10 trillion yen ($130 billion).

"We expect that the radiation levels would persist for a long period of time," van de Putte said. ($1 = 76.855 Japanese Yen) (Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Chris Gallagher)


View the original article here

2011年8月28日日曜日

After Shocking Schaub at UFC 134, Nogueira Teases Return to Japan - Sherdog.com

According to the bookmakers, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira was supposed to lose to Brendan Schaub at UFC 134 on Saturday night.

Instead, the 35-year-old veteran turned back the clock, knocking out Schaub with a devastating flurry of punches in the first frame. However, the victory did not come easily. While Nogueira (Pictured, file photo) eventually found his range and dropped his younger foe, it was Schaub who looked confident early on, peppering the Brazilian with superior speed while moving nimbly around the Octagon.

“The fight was tough. He [threw] a lot of [hard shots],” Nogueira told UFC.com following his win. “We traded some punches and I tried to take him down, but he was tough. He defended the single-leg and clinched and put me in the cage.”

Though only a few minutes had passed since the fight began, Schaub appeared to have too much for Nogueira, as was the case five months ago when the American knocked out another Pride Fighting Championships veteran, Mirko Filipovic, at UFC 128.

However, the result at the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro would be quite a different one. Nogueira continued to wade forward, eating stiff jabs before finally connecting with the shot for which he had been looking.

Schaub wobbled after eating the powerful right hand, and the veteran did not hesitate to finish the job, landing a devastating hook inside that buckled “The Hybrid” against the cage. As Schaub fell face-down on the canvas, nearly limp, Nogueira continued to blast him with punches until the referee intervened. The victory marked the 12-year-pro’s first bout contested on his home soil.

“I was saving the right hand for him. I trained that a lot. We traded some punches, and I felt his punches coming,” said an elated Nogueira. “I did it. I knocked him out in Brazil. It was my first fight in Brazil, my [41st] fight. My training made me strong.”

The win marked Nogueira’s first Octagon appearance in 18 months, during which the former champion underwent both knee and hip surgeries. According to Nogueira, it was a struggle to be ready for his bout with Schaub due to the length and intensiveness of his recovery.

“I just had a surgery in my hip eight months ago. I was walking on crutches four months ago,” said Nogueira. “I want Dana White to know I’m back.”

While the former Pride heavyweight king would not elaborate on whom he would next like to face in the cage, the fighter did hint that he could return soon to the country in which he first became a star. With the UFC rumored to return to Japan in February, fans could see “Minotauro” return to The Land of the Rising Sun as he battles to reestablish his presence among the UFC’s best heavyweights.

“I want to help my friends right now. I want to help Rafael [Cavalcante], who fights Sept. 10. And I want to help Junior dos Santos win the world title,” said Nogueira. “I’m not thinking about my next fight, but for sure I will be ready. If they have a fight in the U.S., I will be ready. When they have a fight in February in Japan, I will be ready to fight over there.”


View the original article here

2011年8月18日木曜日

49ers bring in Culpepper for workout after loss to Saints

SANTA CLARA, California — Daunte Culpepper threw passes to tight end Nate Lawrie once again, on a little bigger stage this time than during their stint together last year with the United Football League's Sacramento Mountain Lions.

Culpepper worked out for some 30 minutes Monday in front of the San Francisco 49ers brass — and Lawrie called it a crisp, impressive session.

Offensive coordinator Greg Roman liked what he saw and heard from the veteran quarterback, but was noncommittal about whether San Francisco would sign him.

It will come down to whether the Niners want to carry two or three quarterbacks, Roman said.

"I was catching balls for him during the workout, and he was throwing it around pretty good. He's spinning it well," said Lawrie, who signed a one-year deal with San Francisco on Sunday. "Daunte's got a ton of experience. He's got a lot of success in this league. And the guy can play, he can throw the ball. That's what it all boils down to."

The Niners apparently believe Culpepper can still bring it despite a year in the minors, so they gave him a hard look.

They were at least considering adding Culpepper to their QB mix after coach Jim Harbaugh said Saturday there could be a need for a veteran backup behind projected starter Alex Smith and rookie Colin Kaepernick.

Harbaugh's offense was ineffective in a 24-3 exhibition loss at New Orleans on Friday night — and he is determined to be better come Saturday's home preseason game with the Oakland Raiders at Candlestick Park.

Harbaugh wasn't available after Monday's practice, a scheduled day off from his media duties.

Tight end Delanie Walker made it sound as if Culpepper had already joined the team. The 49ers had not made any kind of announcement other than Harbaugh acknowledging Sunday that Culpepper would get the tryout.

The 34-year-old Culpepper, who was still at team headquarters for lunch, last played in the NFL for the Detroit Lions in 2009. He started five games and played in eight total.

Several e-mails to Culpepper went unreturned. He acts as his own agent.

In 11 NFL seasons, he has passed for 24,153 yards and 149 touchdowns. A three-time Pro Bowler, he spent his first seven seasons with the Vikings, then one year each with Miami and Oakland before two years in Motown.

Houston — Chris Ogbonnaya made the most of his opportunity in Houston's preseason opener, with virtually every other Texans running back hobbled by injuries.

Ogbonnaya caught a touchdown pass from Matt Leinart and ran for the winning score in the fourth quarter of the Texans' 20-16 win over the New York Jets on Monday night.

The regular starters for both sides only played the first quarter.

Mark Sanchez looked sharp, completing 6 of 7 passes, two to Santonio Holmes.

Matt Schaub, meanwhile, looked shaky for the Texans. He went 2-for-5 for 20 yards and was sacked once before Leinart replaced him.

Ogbonnaya accounted for 104 total yards — 37 on the ground and 67 receiving. He was just about the last running back standing for Houston after Derrick Ward left in the first half with a head injury.


View the original article here

Nintendo 3DS Sales Soar in Japan After Price Cut - PCWorld

Sales of Nintendo's 3DS handheld game console soared in Japan last week when its price was cut 40 percent, according to data released Tuesday.

The gaming device had its best seven-day run of sales since its launch in February, moving 214,821 units, said Japanese publisher Enterbrain, which tracks the gaming market.

That total for the week through Sunday, Aug. 14 marked a significant jump from previous weeks despite including just four days at the newly reduced price. In the week through July 24, the last full week before Nintendo announced the new pricing, only 32,381 were sold in Japan.

On Aug. 11, Nintendo lowered the price of its flagship handheld from ¥25,000 to ¥15,000 (US$325 to $195). The drastic move came less than six months after the 3DS was launched, after a tepid reception from gamers and in an attempt to build market share before the launch of Sony's PlayStation Vita handheld, which is due out late this year in Japan and early next year elsewhere.

Before it launched, Nintendo heralded the 3DS for its use of a three-dimensional screen that doesn't require users to wear special glasses. Sales started strong after the Feb. 26 launch, when gamers formed long lines and snatched up 371,326 of the devices, according to Enterbrain.

But the hype faded fast, and no week of sales came close to that until last week's price cut. Sales of the dual-screen portable have also been weighed down by a lack of popular software.

Nintendo has stuck to its global 3DS sales target through March of 16 million units. It has so far sold about 1.5 million in Japan, Enterbrain said.

The company is also facing fading sales of its iconic Wii console, and last month announced total sales revenue in the April to June quarter was down by half from a year earlier. Nintendo also cut its sales target for the Wii and lowered its annual net profit target by over 80 percent.


View the original article here

2011年8月16日火曜日

After Fukushima: nuclear dirty tricks - The Guardian

The Japanese cabinet decided this week to transfer the country's nuclear safety agency from the trade ministry, where it nestled in a department also dedicated to the expansion of nuclear power, to the environment ministry, where, at least in theory, there is some chance that its operations will not be subverted or manipulated by Japanese energy firms. After nearly half a century of producing nuclear power, Japan has finally separated regulation from promotion, but the move may well have come too late to restore public trust.

In a country where people have to use their own detectors to check on local radiation levels which the government failed to release, where information about threats to life and health after Fukushima dribbled out so haphazardly, and where a nuclear industry apparently unabashed by that disaster has been resorting to dirty tricks to influence public debate, mere bureaucratic rearrangement will hardly suffice. The latest blow to confidence came when it was reported last month that workers at the Kyushu Electric Power Company had been asked to pose as ordinary citizens with no connection to the industry and send emails calling for the resumption of operations at two nuclear reactors in southern Japan to a televised public hearing. Investigations showed this was standard behaviour long before Fukushima, with other power companies admitting that they had sent employees to make up as many as half of the participants in similar forums as far back as 2005.

As if this were not bad enough, two of the utilities said they were urged to do so by the nuclear agency itself. It was this revelation which appears to have led to the decision to fire three top officials, including the head of the agency, and then to reorganise and move it.

Japan's polarised industrial culture, which veers between the heedless pursuit of short- term interest, on the one hand, and confessions, tears, and apparently heartfelt apologies when things go wrong, on the other, makes it an extreme case. But the same factors are at work in every country that has a nuclear industry. The impulse to minimise the inherent risks of the most dangerous technology man has ever tried to master, the tendency to conceal or downplay accidents, the assertion that each succeeding generation of plants is foolproof and super safe, and the presumption, so often proved wrong by events, that every contingency has been provided for, all these have been evident again and again. Angela Merkel, one of the few leading politicians who is also a scientist, saw the writing on the wall. Her decision to phase out nuclear power has revived a global debate which has been dormant for far too long.


View the original article here