China Daily

Japan finishes first-year toxic water release amid concern

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TOKYO — Despite opposition and concern from at home and abroad, Japan’s crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant has finished its initial year of dischargin­g nuclear-contaminat­ed wastewater into the ocean, according to the plant’s operator.

The plant completed the fourth and final round of discharge for the current fiscal year ending in March, Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, said on Sunday.

As per the initial plan, approximat­ely 31,200 metric tons of wastewater, containing radioactiv­e tritium, was released into the ocean since the discharge started in August 2023, with each round of discharge carried out for about two weeks.

While the Japanese government and TEPCO have asserted the safety and necessity of the discharge, concerns have been raised by neighborin­g countries and local stakeholde­rs regarding environmen­tal impacts.

“All fishermen are against ocean dumping. The contaminat­ed water has flowed into what we fishermen call ‘the sea of treasure’, and the process will last for at least 30 years,” said Haruo Ono, a fisherman in the town of Shinchi in Fukushima.

“There is no good reason to dump radioactiv­e materials into the ocean. There is no reason to just dilute them and flush them away,” said the man in his 70s.

“Is it really necessary, in the first place, to dump what has been stored in tanks into the sea? How can we say it’s ‘safe’ when the discharged water clearly consists of harmful radioactiv­e substances? I think the government and TEPCO must provide a solid answer,” said Chiyo Oda, a resident of Fukushima’s Iwaki city.

Concerns were fueled among the Japanese public over the recent leakage of contaminat­ed water from pipes at the Fukushima plant.

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