Times Colonist

Japan struggles to end the flow of contaminat­ed water into sea

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TOKYO — The operator of Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant said Tuesday it is struggling to stop contaminat­ed undergroun­d water from leaking into the sea.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said some of the water is seeping over or around an undergroun­d barrier it created by injecting chemicals into the soil that solidified into a wall.

The latest problem involves undergroun­d water that has built up over the last month since the company began creating the chemical walls to stop leaks after it detected radiation spikes in water samples in May.

TEPCO spokesman Yoshikazu Nagai said the company was slow to deal with the undergroun­d water leaks because it was focusing on cooling the damaged reactors, which posed greater risks.

Three reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant suffered meltdowns after a massive March 2011 earthquake and tsunami destroyed power and cooling systems. The plant is still running on makeshift equipment and has been plagued with blackouts and leaks from undergroun­d tanks.

TEPCO has been repeatedly criticized for delays in handling and disclosing problems at the plant. Alarmed by the latest problem, a panel of officials from area towns and villages rushed to the plant Tuesday for an inspection, demanding TEPCO limit the impact on the sea.

Japan’s nuclear watchdog set up a separate special panel with TEPCO and met Friday to assess the water problem and discuss ways to resolve it. Watchdog officials have urged TEPCO to pump the contaminat­ed water inland and expand undergroun­d and seawater sampling. TEPCO is also building more chemical walls around the plant.

TEPCO officials were unable to answer many of the watchdog officials’ questions, including ones about the leaks’ origin, their routes and how they can be plugged. They also acknowledg­ed that they have neglected large amounts of highly contaminat­ed water that has remained in maintenanc­e trenches since the crisis, a risk also cited by the watchdog.

“It’s a race against the clock,” said Toyoshi Fuketa, a commission­er of the Nuclear Regulation Authority. “The top priority is to keep the water from escaping into the sea.”

Officials acknowledg­ed last month for the first time that the plant has been leaking radioactiv­e water into the Pacific Ocean for some time. After a major leak a month after the meltdowns, TEPCO said it had contained the problem and denied further undergroun­d leaks into the ocean were occurring, although many experts suspected they were.

While the extent of sea contaminat­ion remains unknown, TEPCO has estimated that up to 40 trillion becquerels of radioactiv­e tritium, a water soluble element that can affect DNA but is believed to be less dangerous than cesium or strontium, might have leaked into the sea over the past two years.

The amount of contaminat­ed water at the plant increases by 400 tonnes a day. TEPCO plans to secure storage facilities capable of holding about 800,000 tonnes more water by 2015.

 ?? ISSEI KATO, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers collect data in March near tanks of radiationc­ontaminate­d water at Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant.
ISSEI KATO, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers collect data in March near tanks of radiationc­ontaminate­d water at Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant.

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