Another Nuclear Incident Tsuruga Plant Japan and more so called C "minute" levels of radiation

THE operator of the Tsuruga nuclear power plant in western Japan said today that a "minute" amount of radiation leaked into the environment. A reactor at the plant, 220 miles west of Tokyo, was shut Saturday for an inspection. Earlier this month, the operator, Japan Atomic Power Co., reported a rise in radiation levels, possibly caused by leaks from fuel rods into cooling water. It said at the time that no radiation was leaked into the environment. The radiation leak added to concerns over the state of Japan's nuclear industry. Workers at the Fukushima plant were continuing to grapple with the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl, caused by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The government last week ordered that the Hamaoka plant, located on a major fault line 125 miles west of the capital, be shut pending safety improvements. Its operator, Chubu Electric Power Co, agreed today to the request at a board meeting.

Link and date of the

Link and date of the article, please.

Link and date can be found here....

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service Website. Today's update on the nuclear incident that has been ongoing. May 17th 2011.

This site monitors all current events, accidents, earthquakes, biological hazards, epidemic hazards ect for the world.

Click on the web page scroll down to the incident and click on it. It provides updates on each disaster daily.

http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/index2.php?lang=

I thought it was a new

I thought it was a new incident at the Tsuruga plant, didn't this happen more than two weeks ago?

Minute, minuscule, maybe, could be, so on...

This plant is also leaking radiation, the reports say it is only "minute" amounts. Does anyone else see a pattern with the word play here ?

Well, depends on where "minute" is. Right?

I don't think anyone has said that the leaks from Fukushima are "minute"
or "minuscule" or even, to throw another term in there, "low level". The
only time I've heard these terms used in relation to Fukushima is the
levels we are getting in the US. So, I assume they are claiming "minute"
in the immediate area of the plant.