On March 11, 2011, fifty minutes after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake hit
eastern Japan, a tsunami 45-feet high engulfed the nuclear power plant
known as Fukushima Daiichi, knocking out electrical power and all the
reactors' safety systems. Three reactor cores experienced meltdowns in
the first three days, leading to an unimaginable nuclear disaster. The
person the Tokyo Electric Power Company called for help was Dr. Chuck
Casto. In Station Blackout, Chuck Casto, the foremost authority on
responding to nuclear disasters, shares his first-hand account of how he
led the collaborative team of Japanese and American experts that faced
the challenges of Fukushima. A lifetime of working in the nuclear
industry prepared him to manage an extreme crisis, lessons that apply to
any crisis situation.