Earthquake, Tsunami and the Nuclear Power Plants Explosion is the Worst Crisis in Japan

japan's power plant explosion
Nuetralizing Japan's power plant explosion

Earthquake, tsunami and nuclear power plant explosions are the catastrophic incident resulted the most sever crisis in the 56-years since after the World War II, said Japan Prime Naoto Kan.

Japan’s main concern for this very moment is to avert the tendency of melting down the second power plant.

The report said, “Tsunami damages the cooling system that causes overheating the reactor which resulted explosion of ageing Fukushima No.1.”

Several screws struggle to avert the second reactor where there is a cooling system failure, and the authorities warned that it could suffer to a blast.

Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan said Sunday during a televised national address, “Japan is now facing its worst crisis since after the World War II brought about the catastrophe of Earthquake, Tsunami and Power plant explosion.  And the current situation at the stricken power plant is in a very serious condition.”

“It depends on each of us, to take necessary actions to overcome this crisis” said the prime Minister, who was dressed in an emergency services suit.

“There is a tendency for the second plant to explode 160-miles or 250-kilometers northeast of Tokyo. And the number 3 reactor has also a possibility of explosion,” said Yukio Edano government spokesman, while voicing (–foul word(s) removed–)urances that it would stand from the blast.

After the quake and tsunami disaster hit Friday that crippled the nuclear power plant resulting millions of people left no electricity. Japan’s nuclear industry supplies around a third of its power consumption.

Meltdown possibly occurs when a core of reactor overheats and causes damage to facilities, potentially unleashing radiation to our environment.

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