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  #1  
Old 04-11-2011, 08:32 AM
SamTheEagle SamTheEagle is offline
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Default Robots are too expensive. Humans are cheap.

http://www.slate.com/id/2290932/

Quote:
Fukushima's Bio-Robots
In Japan's nuclear cleanup, is human life cheaper than machines?
By William Saletan
Posted Monday, April 11, 2011, at 7:59 AM ET
A month into Japan's nuclear crisis, no robots have been deployed at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. Instead, the plant's operator is relying on a cheaper, expendable resource: humans.

According to the latest report, published yesterday in London's Financial Times, Japan has only two robots nominally designed for radiation, and neither can do anything at Fukushima. How could such a robotically advanced country be so unprepared? The Times echoes Slate's previous report:

Japanese robotics researchers say efforts to develop robots for the nuclear industry have been held back by a lack of enthusiasm from utilities such as Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), operator of Fukushima Daiichi. Japan's government encouraged development of nuclear-response robots for several years after an accident at an atomic-fuel reprocessing station in 1999 released radiation that killed two workers. But with no large market to spur private investment, prototypes languished in the lab and research programmes have been scaled back.

In other words, TEPCO and other plant operators decided that robots were too expensive.

Instead, the industry has relied on humans even for its most dangerous routine work, such as transferring waste and scrubbing radiation from spent-fuel pools and reactor buildings. Kyodo News and the New York Times say these jobs have been dumped onto temporary workers, who get lower wages, fewer benefits, and less job security. Japanese regulators report that last year, the industry exposed contract workers to radiation levels about 15 times higher than the radiation levels TEPCO's own employees endured.

At Fukushima, the peril is much greater. Fifty of the 300 workers now at the Daiichi plant are contract laborers. They've been sleeping under lead-lined sheets, sometimes in hallways or against walls, in an overcrowded building incompletely shielded from radiation. Until last week, they were getting only two meals a day. Many have been laying cables, clearing debris, or removing contaminated water. More than 20 have exceeded the traditional prescribed limit for daily radiation exposure. On March 24, two contract workers suffered burned feet from radioactive water.

One problem with this reliance on human workers is that in order to protect them from radiation, managers sometimes have to slow or suspend crucial on-site work aimed at mitigating the disaster. For example, a plan to seal the reactor buildings with radiation-blocking sheets has been delayed until September, when radiation levels are expected to have dropped.

The other problem is that the managers sometimes choose the alternative: They continue the work and expose the workers to the radiation.

Since the crisis began, managers have bent at least three safety standards. Each worker is supposed to carry a dosimeter to track his radiation exposure. But after the tsunami, TEPCO couldn't find enough functioning dosimeters on hand. So it sent out work teams with a single dosimeter to cover multiple workers.

The company is also supposed to include in each team an employee who monitors the team members' radiation exposure and makes sure that anyone who has reached the recommended limit is immediately replaced. No such monitor accompanied the two workers who ended up being burned by the contaminated water. They got considerably more radiation exposure than workers are supposed to be limited to each day.

Or perhaps I should say: They got more radiation exposure than workers were supposed to be limited to each day. Normally, the prescribed daily limit is 50 millisieverts. In emergency circumstances, workers are allowed to endure 100 millisieverts. But four days into the Fukushima crisis, Japan raised the limit to 250 millisieverts. Why? According to Kyodo News, "The increase was requested to enable workers to engage in longer hours of assignments and to secure more workers who meet the restriction." When safety rules got in the way, the government bent the rules.

Under the new standards, the workers who got overexposed and burned are no longer considered to have been overexposed.

How can TEPCO attract temp laborers under such dangerous conditions? By dangling money. TEPCO's contractors are offering double pay or more. And many people are taking the deal. They need the money.

To put it crudely, TEPCO and the Japanese government have calculated how far safety standards must be lowered and how much money must be offered to deploy enough humans to clean up Fukushima. Robots were too expensive. But humans are cheap.

Humans were cheap at Chernobyl, too. Thousands were sent to clean up the catastrophe. Many died. They did the job because machines couldn't. For them, cynics coined a grim term: bio-robots.

That was 25 years ago. Robots have advanced considerably since then. But humans haven't. We'd still rather pay our fellow men to die in a nuclear cleanup than build machines to do the job.
Reminds me a bit of that old Isaac Asimov shortstory where humans climbed into and piloted missiles because computers were too expensive to sacrifice.
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  #2  
Old 04-11-2011, 08:39 AM
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Pseudolus Pseudolus is online now
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Quote:
The general was saying, 'Our goal is a simple one, gentlemen; the replacement of the
computer. A ship that can navigate space without a computer on board can be constructed

in one-fifth the time and at one-tenth the expense of a computer-laden ship. We could build
fleets five times, ten times as great as Deneb could if we could but eliminate the computer.
'And I see something even beyond this. It may be fantastic now; a mere dream; but in the
future I see the manned missile!'
There was an instant murmur from the audience.
The general drove on. 'At the present time, our chief bottleneck is the fact that missiles
are limited in intelligence. The computer controlling them can only be so large, and for
that reason they can meet the changing nature of anti-missile defences in an unsatisfactory
way. Few missiles, if any, accomplish their goal, and missile warfare is coming to a dead
end; for the enemy, fortunately, as well as for ourselves.
'On the other hand, a missile with a man or two within, controlling flight by graphitics,
would be lighter, more mobile, more intelligent. It would give us a lead that might well
mean the margin of victory. Besides which, gentlemen, the exigencies of war compel us to
remember one thing. A man is much more dispensable than a computer. Manned missiles
could be launched in numbers and under circumstances that no good general would care to
undertake as far as computer-directed missiles are concerned -'
https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=h...g_of_power.pdf
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  #3  
Old 04-11-2011, 08:45 AM
SamTheEagle SamTheEagle is offline
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That be the one.
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Old 04-11-2011, 09:14 AM
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Incredible Hulctuary Incredible Hulctuary is offline
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It's because of a Titanic philosophy -- it's unsinkable so let's not spend money on all those lifeboats (in this case, robots) that won't be needed.
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Old 04-11-2011, 12:43 PM
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NotUrAvgXBar NotUrAvgXBar is offline
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Can't we just lend them the army of robots we used to clean up after Katrina?
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