If you watch TV, you hear a lot of damages caused by the earthquake in  Japan. 
Let me give you some info which may be hard to get from the US media. 
The hardest hit areas are in the northern part of Japan where I do 
not have any relatives or friends. Thus, I have not heard any casuality 
or property damages among my circle. 
My wife is in Tokyo for an extended period time to take care of her  parents and told me 
that the jolt in Tokyo was pretty bad. But she did not lose any utility  services or anything. 
The train services are back to normal.  People do not travel by car like  in the US. 
Two of my friends were in high rise buildings at the time and one could  not go home 
because of no train service. The other one walked for 4 hours to get home. 
Nuclear power plants to service the Tokyo metropolitan area suffered  from the quake. 
They do not have enough power and they may need to do rolling blackouts. 
As you know, nuclear is used to provide baseline power in Japan as in  many other countries. 
When I interviewed Tepco AND Kepco, they both were proud of their  infrastructures and 
reliable services.  I was skeptical about their readiness for acquiring  other sources of energy. 
This implies the real needs of energy sources other than the legacy ones  in Japan and 
US. 
I will be in Japan in two weeks and  be in the Tokyo area where  aftershocks are expected. 
I came from the western part of Japan where earthquakes were rare and am 
not used to it. The one here in 1989 scared me to death. The one in Kobe 
in 1995 was news to me.........I was in the US then and did not  experience it. 
Zen 
P.S> Tepco http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/index-e.html 
kepco http://www.kepco.co.jp/english/index.html
2011年3月13日日曜日
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