Wednesday, March 16, 2011

NRC Offers Americans In Japan Evacuation Recommendations

 


# 5408

 

 

I’ve been looking for the official statement for a couple of hours, but Sharon Sanders at FluTrackers beat me to it.   Here is the statement by the United States’ NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission) on prudent evacuation advice for Americans in the vicinity of Japan’s damaged reactors.

 

You’ll note that their evacuation recommendations (50 km) are considerably more aggressive than the one issued (20 km) by Japanese officials.

 

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NRC PROVIDES PROTECTIVE ACTION RECOMMENDATIONS BASED ON U.S. GUIDELINES


Under the guidelines for public safety that would be used in the United States under similar circumstances, the NRC believes it is appropriate for U.S. residents within 50 miles of the Fukushima reactors to evacuate.

 

Among other things, in the United States protective actions recommendations are implemented when projected doses could exceed 1 rem to the body or 5 rem to the thyroid. A rem is a measure of radiation dose. The average American is exposed to approximately 620 millirems, or 0.62 rem, of radiation each year from natural and manmade sources.

 

In making protective action recommendations, the NRC takes into account a variety of factors that include weather, wind direction and speed, and the status of the problem at the reactors.

 

Attached are the results of two sets of computer calculations used to support the NRC recommendations.

 

In response to nuclear emergencies, the NRC works with other U.S. agencies to monitor radioactive releases and predict their path. All the available information continues to indicate Hawaii, Alaska, the U.S. Territories and the U.S. West Coast are not expected to experience any harmful levels of radioactivity.