Otago Daily Times

Fukushima nuclear fuel matter lifted

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TOKYO: Tokyo Electric Power Co has begun removing spent nuclear fuel rods from a second building at the wrecked Fukushima plant, using remotecont­rolled cranes to lift hundreds of radioactiv­e cylinders from a highly contaminat­ed reactor site.

The company, known as Tepco, said yesterday it had successful­ly removed the first of more than 560 fuel rod assemblies from the No 3 reactor and placed it in a specially designed steel cask for transfer to the ground.

The reactor was one of three reactors at Fukushima that suffered meltdowns after a 2011 earthquake and tsunami shut down the plant’s cooling systems.

In 2014, Tepco finished the removal of fuel rods from the No 4 reactor. However, the removal operation for the No 3 site will be much more difficult because of the damage it suffered in the 2011 disaster, with an explosion covering the pool where the rods currently sit in debris, including a crane.

The damage and debris removal delayed the No 3 operations for four years. Additional­ly, the highly irradiated air around the site means all the cranes moving the transporta­tion casks carrying the rods, which weigh about 45 tonnes, must be operated remotely.

Tepco must pluck the brittle and potentiall­y damaged assemblies from a flooded compartmen­t on the reactor site that is 18m above ground level and place them in containmen­t casks, raise the casks from the pool and place them on a truck on the ground to transport them to a final pool of water for storage.

If the rods are exposed to air or if they break, radioactiv­e gases could be released into the atmosphere.

‘‘The work is expected to completed in March 2021, but safety is our first priority,’’ spokesman Joji Hara said.

The 2011 disaster forced 160,000 people to evacuate areas nearby the Fukushima plant, and many of them have never returned to the most contaminat­ed areas.

Japan’s Government estimated in 2016 the total cost of dismantlin­g Fukushima, decontamin­ating the affected areas, and paying compensati­on would amount to ¥21.5 trillion yen ($NZ284 billion), about 20% of the country’s annual budget.

Even with the successful transfer of the fuel rods, Tepco faces other problems at Fukushima.

Tepco has struggled for more than eight years with rising levels of contaminat­ed water that comes from its jerryrigge­d cooling system for the melted reactor cores, in addition to power failures and water leaks.

Last year, Tepco said a system meant to purify contaminat­ed water had failed to remove dangerous radioactiv­e contaminan­ts, setting back efforts to deal with the water that is piling up in tanks covering the site. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Delicate work . . . This file photo shows a domeshaped rooftop cover housing key equipment being installed at the No 3 reactor of the Fukushima Daiich nuclear power plant in Japan last year. Tokyo Electric Power Co said yesterday workers started removing the first of 566 fuel units stored in the pool at No 3.
PHOTO: AP Delicate work . . . This file photo shows a domeshaped rooftop cover housing key equipment being installed at the No 3 reactor of the Fukushima Daiich nuclear power plant in Japan last year. Tokyo Electric Power Co said yesterday workers started removing the first of 566 fuel units stored in the pool at No 3.

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