Yuma Sun

Japan’s government to start releasing Fukushima water into sea in 2 years

- BY MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO – Japan’s government decided Tuesday to start releasing massive amounts of treated radioactiv­e water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean in two years – an option fiercely opposed by local fishermen and residents.

The decision, long speculated but delayed for years due to safety concerns and protests, came at a meeting of Cabinet ministers who endorsed the ocean release as the best option.

The accumulati­ng water has been stored in tanks at the Fukushima Daiichi plant since 2011, when a massive earthquake and tsunami damaged its reactors and their cooling water became contaminat­ed and began leaking.

The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., says its storage capacity will be full late next year.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the ocean release was the “most realistic” option and that disposing the water is “unavoidabl­e” for the decommissi­oning of the Fukushima plant, which is expected to take decades.

TEPCO and government officials say tritium, which is not harmful in small amounts, cannot be removed from the water, but all other selected radionucli­des can be reduced to levels allowed for release. Some scientists say the long-term impact on marine life from low-dose exposure to such large volumes of water is unknown.

Under the basic plan adopted by the ministers, TEPCO will start releasing the water in about two years after building a facility under the regulatory authority’s safety requiremen­ts. It said the disposal of the water cannot be postponed further and is necessary to improve the environmen­t surroundin­g the plant so residents can live there safely.

TEPCO says its water storage capacity of 1.37 million tons will be full around the fall of 2022. Also, the area now filled with storage tanks will have to be freed up for building new facilities that will be needed for removing melted fuel debris from inside the reactors, a process expected to start in coming years.

In the decade since the tsunami disaster, water meant to cool the nuclear material has constantly escaped from the damaged primary containmen­t vessels into the basements of the reactor buildings. To make up for the loss, more water has been pumped into the reactors to continue to cool the melted fuel. Water is also pumped out and treated, part of which is recycled as cooling water, and the remainder stored in 1,020 tanks now holding 1.25 million tons of radioactiv­e water.

Those tanks that occupy a large space at the plant complex interfere with the safe and steady progress of the decommissi­oning, Economy and Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama said. The tanks also could be damaged and leak in case of another powerful earthquake or tsunami, the report said.

Releasing the water to the ocean was described as the most realistic method by a government panel that for nearly seven years had discussed how to dispose of the water without further harming Fukushima’s image, fisheries and other businesses. The report it prepared last year mentioned evaporatio­n as a less desirable option.

About 70% of the water in the tanks exceeds allowable discharge limits for contaminat­ion but will be filtered again and diluted with seawater before it is released, the report says. According to a preliminar­y estimate, gradual releases of water will take about 30 years but will be completed before the plant is fully decommissi­oned.

Japan will abide by internatio­nal rules for a release, obtain support from the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency and others, and ensure disclosure of data and transparen­cy to gain understand­ing of the internatio­nal community, the report said. China and South Korea have raised serious concern about the discharge of the water and its potential impact.

The government has said it will do the utmost to support local fisheries, and the report said TEPCO would compensate for damages if they occur despite those efforts.

Kajiyama is set to visit Fukushima on Tuesday afternoon to meet with local town and fisheries officials to explain the decision. He said he will continue to make efforts to gain their understand­ing over the next two years.

 ?? JAPANESE PRIME MINISTER YOSHIHIDE SUGA YOSHITAKA SUGAWARA/AP ?? (left) attends a cabinet meeting at his official residence in Tokyo Tuesday.
JAPANESE PRIME MINISTER YOSHIHIDE SUGA YOSHITAKA SUGAWARA/AP (left) attends a cabinet meeting at his official residence in Tokyo Tuesday.

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