The nuclear and industrial safety agency confirms the crisis level has  been raised from five to seven on the international nuclear and  radiological event scale
Japan has raised the severity level of its nuclear crisis to a maximum  seven, putting the emergency at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant on a  par with Chernobyl.
Officials from the nuclear and industrial  safety agency [Nisa] confirmed that the crisis level had been raised  from five to seven on the international nuclear and radiological event  [INES] scale.
But they said the new rating reflects the initial  impact of the nuclear crisis, adding that radiation levels have since  dropped dramatically.
The scale, devised by the International  Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA], ranks nuclear and radiological accidents  and incidents by severity from one to seven.
Level seven incidents  involve a major release of radiation with widespread health and  environmental effects, according to the IAEA.
In recent days  Japanese officials had suggested there was no need to raise the severity  level from five, which applied to the Three Mile Island accident in  1979.
A spokesman for Nisa said the decision to raise the level to  the status of major accident did not mean that the Japanese plant posed  the same threat to public health or involved similarly big releases of  radiation as the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.
"Chernobyl exploded  while the reactors were still active, which is completely different from  the situation at Fukushima," Hidehiko Nishiyama said.
He added that the decision had been taken a month after the accident because experts needed time to analyse data.
Japan's  nuclear safety commission estimated that the Fukushima plant's reactors  had released up to 10,000 terabequerels of radioactive iodine-131 into  the air for several hours after they were damaged in the March 11  earthquake and tsunami.
The emission of radioactive substances from Fukushima Daiichi was about 10% of that detected at Chernobyl, Nishiyama said.
The  nuclear safety commission said emissions have since dropped to below  one terabecquerel per hour, adding that it was examining the total  amount of radioactive materials released.
Some experts criticised  the move as excessive. "I think raising it to the level of Chernobyl is  excessive," said Murray Jennex, associate professor at San Diego State  University. "It's nowhere near that level. Chernobyl was terrible - it  blew and they had no containment, and they were stuck.
"The  [Japanese] containment has been holding, the only thing that hasn't is  the fuel pool that caught fire. I don't see those as the same event. If  they want to do that, that's fine. I think they're being overly  pessimistic."
Tuesday's decision came after the government said it  would widen the evacuation zone near the plant to include five  communities lying outside the current 20-kilometre no-go area.
About  70,000 people living within a 20-kilometre radius of the plant have  already been evacuated, while 130,000 living between 20-30 km have been  told to leave voluntarily or stay indoors.
The latest evacuation,  which could take at least a week to complete, was prompted by the lack  of progress in fixing cooling systems at the damaged plant and concerns  about the long-term effects on public health.
"These new  evacuation plans are meant to ensure safety against risks of living [in  affected communities] for half a year or one year," the government's  chief spokesman, Yukio Edano, said.
Japan's northeast and eastern regions have been hit by two big aftershocks in the past 24 hours.
Shortly  after 8am on Tuesday, an earthquake measuring magnitude 6.3 that struck  off the coast of Chiba prefecture was followed by reports of a fire  breaking out at the No 4 reactor at Fukushima Daichi. The blaze was  quickly extinguished, officials said.
The tremor was one of more than 400 aftershocks above magnitude 5 to have hit the area since March 11.
In  one of the few signs of progress, the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric  Power [Tepco], said it had stopped pumping low-level radioactive water  from the reactor buildings into the sea.
The controversial  measure, which drew criticism from neighbouring China and South Korea,  was designed to free up storage space for highly contaminated water.
But  engineers say they are no closer to restoring the plant's cooling  system; until they do, they will be unable to cool overheating fuel rods  and stabilise the facility's six reactors.
On Monday, Tepco's president, Masataka Shimizu, made his first visit to Fukushima prefecture since the crisis began.
"I  would like to deeply apologise again for causing physical and  psychological hardship," he said. The prefecture's governor, however,  refused to meet him.
 
 

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