The Boston Globe

Probing heart of nuclear disaster

Cleanup turns to fuel debris

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO — As Japan prepares to mark the 13th anniversar­y of its worst nuclear disaster, the man in charge of cleaning it up says his team is fighting to bring a sample out of the heart of the site’s radioactiv­e debris.

A decades-long project to clean up the remains of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is preparing to remove damaged fuel debris from the plant's reactors, but much about what's inside them is still a mystery.

The key to unlocking that mystery — and figuring out how to clean it up — is a sample of melted fuel from inside a reactor, said Akira Ono, head of decommissi­oning for Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, in an interview with the Associated Press.

Getting that sample would be like penetratin­g “the main keep of the castle” in the battle of decommissi­oning, Ono said. “We have achieved a number of things, but we still have a lot of thinking to do to tackle the unpreceden­ted task of removing melted fuel.”

A magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011, damaged the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s cooling systems, causing three of its reactors to meltdown, releasing radiation and driving thousands of residents from their homes. Some areas near the plant are still unlivable.

About 880 tons of highly radioactiv­e melted nuclear fuel remains inside the three damaged reactors, but no one knows what condition the melted fuel is in or exactly where in the reactors it fell. That data is crucial to make a plan to remove it safely, said Ono.

Since a 2019 robot probe first looked inside the No. 2 reactor — the least damaged — TEPCO has been trying to extract a small amount of melted debris from it using a robotic arm. That effort has been delayed for more than two years as the team works out how to get the robot past the wreckage. The team’s next attempt will come in October, using a previously tested device that resembles a fishing rod to get a preliminar­y sample out, while waiting technical improvemen­ts to the robotic arm, Ono said.

Last month, the plant made its first drone flight into the worst-hit reactor, No. 1 reactor, to investigat­e the melted debris, but had to cancel a second day of exploratio­n after a secondary robot that helped with data transmissi­on failed.

“We are new to these things and sometimes encounter unanticipa­ted mishaps on the ground. But they are all valuable lessons learned for our next steps,” Ono said.

Critics say the 30- to 40-year cleanup target set by the government and TEPCO is overly optimistic.

The lack of data, technology, and plans on what to do with the fatally radioactiv­e melted fuel and other nuclear waste at the end makes it difficult to have a clear view of how the plant complex and its surroundin­gs may end up when the cleanup ends.

Ono has said the utility's role is to do its best to tackle the challenges one at a time and safely.

Last August, the plant began dischargin­g treated water into the sea, which Ono said was a major step forward. If the next attempt to recover a sample from the No. 2 reactor succeeds, it will be “a huge step” and “a major change of stage,” he said.

Fukushima Daiichi is currently releasing a fourth 7,800ton batch of water. So far, daily seawater sampling results have met safety standards, but the controvers­ial plan has faced protests.

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