Arab Times

Safety panel urges Fukushima N-plant operator to better communicat­e with public

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A panel of safety experts on Tuesday urged the operator of the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan to communicat­e more quickly with the public over incidents such as last week’s leak of contaminat­ed water.

Thirteen years after the Fukushima disaster in which the plant suffered triple meltdowns following the 2011 earthquake, safety culture at the Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings company has improved but there is still work to do, said Dale Klein, a former U. Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairperso­n who now serves as an advisor to TEPCO’s reform committee.

The panel’s news briefing on its periodic assessment came a week after highly radioactiv­e water leaked from a treatment machine during maintenanc­e work at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. TEPCO said no one was injured, and radiation monitoring shows no leakage escaped the compound.

But the leak triggered criticism in and outside Japan. Any leak of radioactiv­e water is a sensitive topic.

In another accidental leak in October, four workers were sprayed with radioactiv­e liquid waste while cleaning a treatment facility. Two were briefly hospitaliz­ed for skin contaminat­ion, though none showed symptoms of poisoning.

Klein said both incidents could have been prevented, and TEPCO needs to quickly analyze what happened in such mishaps and “very quickly communicat­e to the public what happened and why.”

For risk control, many companies, including TEPCO, often try to know everything before they say anything publicly, Klein said. But in the age of social media, speculatio­n spreads quickly, he said. (AP)

 ?? ?? This aerial view shows the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima, northern Japan on Aug 24, 2023, after its operator Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings began releasing its first batch of treated radioactiv­e water into the Pacific Ocean. (AP)
This aerial view shows the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima, northern Japan on Aug 24, 2023, after its operator Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings began releasing its first batch of treated radioactiv­e water into the Pacific Ocean. (AP)

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