The Borneo Post

IAEA says last month’s Fukushima leak ‘minor incident’

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TOKYO: A leak last month at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant was “a minor incident” unrelated to the release of treated wastewater, Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency head Rafael Grossi said yesterday.

Plant operator Tepco reported the leak in early February at a part of the site that processes radioactiv­e water.

It said no sign of contaminat­ion had been detected outside the plant, which suffered a devastatin­g meltdown in 2011.

Grossi, on a three-day tour of Japan that included a visit to Fukushima, described the incident as ‘a splash from one side of the facility’.

“It concerns a small amount of water, initially estimated at five cubic metres, then revised to 1.5 cubic metres of water,” he told reporters.

“It was a minor incident” of the kind that can take place on a big industrial site, the IAEA chief said, adding that there were ‘no consequenc­es’.

The event “has nothing to do with the process of the ... discharge of water from the plant”, he said - referring to the gradual release of 540 Olympic swimming pools’ worth of treated and diluted wastewater which began in August.

“This was an incident in another place, a different part of the facility,” Grossi added.

The water release has been endorsed by the IAEA, and Tepco says all radioactiv­e elements have been filtered out except for tritium, levels of which are within safe limits.

But China and Russia have criticised the release into the Pacific Ocean and banned Japanese seafood imports, saying that Japan is polluting the environmen­t.

“Compared to last year, when discharges of water began, I saw a big change for the better” in discussion­s with officials and students in the Fukushima region, Grossi said.

“Last year, there was concern, uncertaint­y, there was doubt about whether the process would have consequenc­es negative for the environmen­t,” he said.

“This year (there) were expression­s of satisfacti­on” that “the treated water has been discharged without any traceable presence of, or very, very low presence of tritium.”

The Fukushima plant was wrecked by a huge earthquake and tsunami in 2011 that killed 18,000 people.

It was one of the worst nuclear disasters in history and the clean-up operation is expected to take decades, with the most dangerous part - removing radioactiv­e fuel and rubble from three stricken reactors - yet to begin.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (right) shaking hands with Grossi at the prime minister’s office in Tokyo.
— AFP photo Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (right) shaking hands with Grossi at the prime minister’s office in Tokyo.

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