2012 Photo Contest, General News, 3rd prize

Japan's Nuclear Refugees

Photographer

David Guttenfelder

The Associated Press for <em>National Geographic</em> magazine

09 June, 2011

Nobuko Sanpei (74) eats dinner in her cardboard-box home, in an evacuee shelter at a convention center, in June. She cut a window into the wall because it was too hot inside.

About the photographer

David Guttenfelder

David Guttenfelder is a photojournalist and National Geographic Explorer focusing on geopolitical conflict, conservation, and culture. Guttenfelder has spent more than 25 year...

Background story

Koriyama, Fukushima prefecture, Japan

Nobuko Sanpei (74) eats dinner in her cardboard-box home, in an evacuee shelter at a convention center, in June. She cut a window into the wall because it was too hot inside. The Tohoku earthquake and subsequent tsunami in Japan damaged vital cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Blasts occurred in a series of reactors, leading to nuclear meltdown and a release of radioactive material, in what was seen as the world’s most serious nuclear accident since the Chernobyl disaster of 1986. A 20-kilometer exclusion zone was declared around the plant, and more than 80,000 people were evacuated. The exclusion zone remained in place for months after the incident, with the Japanese government predicting it could take 40 years to fully decommission the plant and clean up surrounding areas.

Technical information

Shutter Speed
1/50 sec
Focal length
35 mm
F-Stop
f/2.8
ISO
1600
Camera
Canon EOS 5D Mark II

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