To: UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
An Urgent Request on UN Intervention to Stabilize the Fukushima Unit 4 Spent Nuclear Fuel

Recently, former diplomats and experts both in Japan and abroad stressed the extremely risky condition of the Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4 spent nuclear fuel pool and this is being widely reported by world media.

Robert Alvarez, Senior Scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), who is one of the best-known experts on spent nuclear fuel, stated that in Unit 4 there is spent nuclear fuel which contains Cesium-137 (Cs-137) that is equivalent to 10 times the amount that was released at the time of the Chernobyl nuclear accident.

Thus, if an earthquake or other event were to cause this pool to drain, this could result in a catastrophic radiological fire involving nearly 10 times the amount of Cs-137 released by the Chernobyl accident.

Nearly all of the 10,893 spent fuel assemblies at the Fukushima Daiichi plant sit in pools vulnerable to future earthquakes, with roughly 85 times more long-lived radioactivity than released at Chernobyl.

Nuclear experts from the US and Japan such as Arnie Gundersen, Robert Alvarez, Hiroaki Koide, Masashi Goto, and Mitsuhei Murata, a former Japanese ambassador to Switzerland, and, Akio Matsumura, a former UN diplomat, have continually warned against the high risk of the Fukushima Unit 4 spent nuclear fuel pool.

US Senator Roy Wyden, after his visit to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on 6 April, 2012, issued a press release on 16 April, pointing out the catastrophic risk of Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4, calling for urgent US government intervention. Senator Wyden
also sent a letter to Ichiro Fujisaki, Japan’s Ambassador to the United States, requesting Japan to accept international assistance to tackle the crisis.

We Japanese civil organizations express our deepest concern that our government does not inform its citizens about the extent of risk of the Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4 spent nuclear fuel pool.

Given the fact that collapse of this pool could potentially lead to catastrophic consequences with worldwide implications, what the Japanese government should be doing as a responsible member of the international community is to avoid any further disaster by mobilizing all the wisdom and the means available in order to stabilize this spent nuclear fuel.

It is clearly evident that Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4 spent nuclear fuel pool is no longer a Japanese issue but an international issue with potentially serious consequences.

Therefore, it is imperative for the Japanese government and the international community to work together on this crisis before it becomes too late.

We are appealing to the United Nations to help Japan and the planet in order to prevent the irreversible consequences of a catastrophe that could affect generations to come.

We herewith make our urgent request to you as follows:

1. The United Nations should organize a Nuclear Security Summit to take up the crucial problem of the Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4 spent nuclear fuel pool.

2. The United Nations should establish an independent assessment team on Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4 and coordinate international assistance in order to stabilize the unit’s spent nuclear fuel and prevent radiological consequences with potentially catastrophic consequences.

30 April 2012

Shut Tomari (Japan) and Green Action (Japan)

Endorsed by:
Hiroaki Koide Kyoto University Nuclear Reactor Research Institute (Japan)

Mitsuhei Murata Former ambassador to Switzerland and to Senegal

Board member, Global System and Ethics Society (Japan)

Akio Matsumura Former United Nations diplomat

Robert Alvarez Senior Scholar, Institute for Policy Studies,
Washington, D.C. (USA)

Masashi Goto Former Nuclear Plant Engineer (Japan)

Signing organizations: 72 Japanese organizations have signed this petition (as of 30 April 2012)

1. Shut Tomari, Hokkaido

2. Green Action, Kyoto

3. Citizen’s Nuclear Information Center, Tokyo

4. Osaka Group against Mihama Ooi Takahama Nuclear Power, Osaka

5. Aging Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Group, Tokyo

6. Stop Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant!, Shizuoka

7. Espace des Femmes, Hokkaido

8. “Let’s learn Pluthermal” Shiribeshi Citizen’s Network, Hokkaido

9. Hairo Action Fukushima, Fukushima and Evacuation Areas in Japan

10. STOP MOX! Fukushima, Fukusima

11. Fukushima Moonlight, Fukuoka

12. Yawatahama Women’s Group to Protect Children from Nuclear Power
Plant, Ehime

13. Ikata People Against Mox, Ehime

14. We Do Not Want Plutonium! , Tokyo

15. Genkai Nuclear Power Pluthermal Trial Support Group, Fukuoka

16. Genkai Nuclear Power Pluthermal Trial support Group, Fukuona

17. Pluthermal and 100 Years of Saga Prefecture Group, Saga

18. No Nuclear Plants! Yamaguchi Network, Yamaguchi

19. Food Policy Center Vision21

20. Genpatsu Yamenkai, Fukuoka

21. Japan Environmental Law Lawyers Association JELF

22. Nonviolent Direct Action Network (HANET)

23. Anti-Nuclear-Power and Nuclear Fuels Reprocessing Protest Advertising Group, Tokyo

24. Kochi Green Citizen’s Network, Kochi

25. Kaku-no-Gomi Campaign, Chubu, Nagoya, Aichi

26. Aloha from Hawaii

27. Tohoku Asia Information Center, Hiroshima

28. No-Nukes Citizen’s Network, Tokushima

29. No-nukes Net Kushiro, Hokkaido

30. Fukushima Meeting for Environment, Human Rights and Peace, Fukushima

31. FoE (Friends of the Earth Japan), Tokyo

32. Citizen’s Group on Nuclear Waste, Horonobe, Hokkaido

33. Team From Now On, Hokkaido

34. No Nukes! Protect Children from Radioactivity

35. Concerned Citizens for Children’s Human Rights, Ehime

36. Protect the Sea of Sanriku from Radioactivity, Iwate

37. Iwate Organic Farming Study Group, Iwate

38. Dandelion House, Tokyo

39. Decommission All Nuclear Power! Women’s Group for Protection of Kariwa Village, Niigata

40. Sapporo Shoku Machi Network, Hokkaido

41. Citizens Wind for Peace, Tokyo

42. Together with the Earth NPO, Osaka

43. Kawauchi Tsuyukusa Group, Kagoshima

44. Group against Construction of Kawaunchi Nuclear Plant, Kagoshima

45. Hassei Group against Ikata Nuclear Plant, Ehime

46. For Citizen’s Autonomy, Hokkaido

47. No-Nukes Women Group Hokkaido, Hokkaido

48. Hokkaido Peace Net, Hokkaido

49. Future for Fukushima Children, Hokkaido

50. Good Bye Kashiwazaki Kariwa Nuclear Power Project, Niigata

51. Weaving A Better Future Mothers’ Group

52. Group Aozora MeeMee

53. Mothers and Fathers’No-Nukes Declaration 2011

54. Southern Osaka Network for Protection from Radioactivity, Osaka

55. Kansai Network on Protection of Children from Radioactivity, Kansai

56. Journey To the Future

57. Morinokoya

58. Kaburaya

59. Nishiyashiki

60. Dandelion Fortress, Fukuoka

61. Dohatsuten Wo Tsuku Kai, Fukuoka

62. Global Ethics Association

63. Buppouzan Zenngennji

64. STOP Nuclear Plants BEFORE Huge Quake Strikes

65. Lee Group to Prevent Earthquake Disaster and Nuclear Accident

66. Rokkasho Village Home of Flowers and Herbs, Aomori

67. Anti-TEPCO-Nuclear-Power Consumers Group, Tokyo

68. Miyazu Mitsubati Project, Kyoto

69. Citizen’s Plaza, Minoh , Osaka

70. Monoh Citizen’s Group on Good Bye Nuclear Power, Osaka

71. Campaign Fukuoka against Nuclear and Uranium Weapons, Fukuoka

72. Seeking for Japan-US Security Treaty Termination Notice, Tokyo