Toronto Star

Water still radioactiv­e at Fukushima plant

Questions linger 7 years after nuclear disaster

- MARI YAMAGUCHI

The operator of Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant said Friday that much of the radioactiv­e water stored at the plant isn’t clean enough and needs further treatment if it is to be released into the ocean.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. and the government had previously said that treatment of the water had removed all radioactiv­e elements except tritium, which experts say is safe in small amounts.

They called it “tritium water,” but it actually wasn’t.

TEPCO said Friday that studies found the water still contains other elements, including radioactiv­e iodine, cesium and strontium.

It said more than 80 per cent of the 900,000 tons of water stored in large, densely packed tanks contains radioactiv­ity exceeding limits for release into the environmen­t.

TEPCO general manager Junichi Matsumoto said radioactiv­e elements remained, especially earlier in the crisis when plant workers had to deal with large amounts of contaminat­ed water leaking from the wrecked reactors and could not afford time to stop the treatment machines to change filters frequently.

“We had to prioritize processing large amounts of water as quickly as possible to reduce the overall risk,” Matsumoto said.

About 161,000 tons of the treated water has 10 to 100 times the limit for release into the environmen­t, and another 65,200 tons has up to nearly 20,000 times the limit, TEPCO said.

More than seven years since a massive 2011 earthquake and tsunami destroyed three reactors at the plant, Japan has yet to reach a consensus on what to do with the radioactiv­e water.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada