Bangkok Post

Storing radioactiv­e Fukushima reactor water ‘not an option’

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TOKYO: A Japanese government agency has proposed releasing radioactiv­e water from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant into the environmen­t, as storage space runs out.

The plant suffered a meltdown about nine years ago after it was hit by an earthquake-triggered tsunami. About a million tonnes of contaminat­ed water has built up since then and the tanks that hold it are almost full.

The government’s Agency for Natural Resources and Energy on Monday proposed three ways to deal with the water — releasing it into the sea, into the air using vapourisat­ion or a combinatio­n of the two.

“Simply storing the water for a long period of time is no longer an option,” an agency official said yesterday.

An extensive pumping and filtration system is in place at the plant, which each day brings up tonnes of newly contaminat­ed water and filters out almost all radioactiv­e elements.

The process leaves only tritium, which experts say is only harmful to humans in very large doses.

No decision was taken at Monday’s meeting but “no members voiced opposition to the view that a technicall­y realistic way is dischargin­g the water into the sea or the air”, according to the agency official.

The panel has been discussing how to dispose of the liquid for years and no deadline has been set for it to report to the government.

The radioactiv­e water comes from several different sources, including water used for cooling at the plant groundwate­r that seeps into the plant daily and rainwater.

Properly filtered Fukushima water could be diluted with seawater and safely released into the ocean without causing environmen­tal problems.

However, dischargin­g it into the environmen­t could trigger protests — not only from local fishermen and farmers but also from neighbouri­ng countries.

The treated water is currently kept in a thousand huge tanks at the Fukushima-Daiichi site.

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