The Manila Times

Radioactiv­e water leaked from Fukushima facility

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An estimated 5,500 liters of radioactiv­e water leaked from Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, but no sign of contaminat­ion has been detected outside the facility, its operator said on Thursday.

A spokesman from the Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco) told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the leak was detected at a part of the plant that processes contaminat­ed water.

“We estimate that roughly 5.5 tons (5,500L) of water leaked” on Wednesday morning, but “THERE HAVE BEEN NO SIGNIfiCAN­T changes” at posts monitoring radioactiv­ity around the power station, she said.

Even so, Tepco plans to remove soil from around the area that may have been contaminat­ed, the spokesman said, without providING SPECIfiC DETAILS ON THE LOCATION of the leaked water.

The Fukushima plant was WRECKED BY A HUGE EARTHQUAKE AND tsunami in March 2011 that killed 18,000 people. It was one of the worst nuclear disasters in history.

The cleanup operation is expected to take decades, with the most dangerous part — removing radioactiv­e fuel and rubble from three stricken reactors — yet to begin.

In August, Japan began gradually releasing into the Pacific Ocean 1.34 million tons of treated wastewater that had been collected since the catastroph­e, saying it is harmless and heavily diluted with seawater.

This view is backed by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, but China and Russia have criticized the release and banned Japanese seafood imports.

Wednesday’s leak took place at a facility which processes the water before most radioactiv­e eleMENTS ARE fiLTERED OUT AT A DIFFERENT, advanced facility known as ALPS.

Tepco said the leak from a vent was spotted by a worker who was cleaning the vent before operating the facility.

“Vents should be closed during cleaning, but this time they were open,” the spokesman said.

In a separate incident, smoke and sparks were detected on Thursday at a fan of the Tsuruga Nuclear Power Plant, which is in the process of decommissi­oning.

“The situation was resolved immediatel­y with no injury or leak of radioactiv­e materials,” a spokesman for the operator Japan Atomic Power told AFP.

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