Japan's cut-price cleanup of Fukushima disaster
http://atimes.com/atimes/Japan/JAP-01-011113.html
Japan's cut-price cleanup of Fukushima disaster
By Justin McCurry and David McNeill
Nov 1, '13
FUKUSHIMA - During a visit to Fukushima Daiichi in September, Abe Shinzo told workers: "The future of Japan rests on your shoulders. I am counting on you."
The prime minister's exhortation was directed at almost 6,000 technicians and engineers, truck drivers and builders who, almost three years after the plant suffered a triple meltdown, remain on the frontline of the world's most hazardous industrial cleanup.
Yet as the challenges facing Fukushima Daiichi become clearer with every new radiation leak and mishap, the men responsible for cleaning up the plant are suffering from plummeting morale, health problems and deep anxiety about the future. Even now, at the start of a decommissioning operation that is expected to last four decades, the plant faces a shortage of workers qualified to manage the dangerous work that lies ahead, according to people with firsthand knowledge of the situation inside the facility.
The dangers faced by the nearly 900 employees of Tokyo Electric Power [Tepco] and some 5,000 workers hired by a network of contractors and sub-contractors were underlined in October when six men were doused with contaminated water at a desalination facility. Their brush with danger was a sign that the cleanup is entering its most precarious stage since the March 2011 meltdown.