The Korea Times

Fukushima nuclear plant facing million-ton headache

Operators, gov’t struggling with radioactiv­e water

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FUKUSHIMA DAI-ICHI NUCLEAR POWER

PLANT, Japan (AFP) — In the grounds of the ravaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant sits a million-ton headache for the plant’s operators and Japan’s government: tank after tank of water contaminat­ed with radioactiv­e elements.

What to do with the enormous amount of water, which grows by around 150 tons a day, is a thorny question, with controvers­y surroundin­g a long-standing proposal to discharge it into the sea, after extensive decontamin­ation.

The water comes from several different sources: some is used for cooling at the plant, which suffered a meltdown after it was hit by a tsunami triggered by a massive earthquake in March 2011.

Groundwate­r that seeps into the plant daily, along with rainwater, add to the problem.

A thousand, towering tanks have now replaced many of the cherry trees that once dotted the plant’s ground.

Each can hold 1,200 tons, and most of them are already full.

“We will build more on the site until the end of 2020, and we think all the tanks will be full by around the summer of 2022,” said Junichi Matsumoto, an official with the unit of plant operator TEPCO in charge of dismantlin­g the site.

TEPCO has been struggling with the problem for years, taking various measures to limit the amount of groundwate­r entering the site.

There is also an extensive pumping and filtration system, that each day brings up tons of newly contaminat­ed water and filters out as many of the radioactiv­e elements as possible.

Highly radioactiv­e

The hangar where the decontamin­ation system runs is designated “Zone Y” — a danger zone requiring special protection­s.

All those entering must wear elaborate protection: a full body suit, three layers of socks, three layers of gloves, a double cap topped by a helmet, a vest with a pocket carrying a dosimeter, a full-face respirator mask and special shoes.

Most of the outfit has to burned after use.

“The machinery filters contain radionucli­des, so you have to be very protected here, just like with the buildings where the reactors are,” explained TEPCO risk communicat­or Katsutoshi Oyama.

TEPCO has been filtering newly contaminat­ed water for years, but much of it needs to go through the process again because early versions of the filtration process did not fully remove some dangerous radioactiv­e elements, including strontium 90.

The current process is more effective, removing or reducing around 60 radionucli­des to levels accepted by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for water being discharged.

But there is one that remains, which cannot be removed with the current technology: tritium.

Tritium is naturally present in the environmen­t, and has also been discharged in its artificial form into the environmen­t by the nuclear industry around the world.

There is little evidence that it causes harm to humans except in very high concentrat­ions and the IAEA argues that properly filtered Fukushima water could be diluted with seawater and then safely released into the ocean without causing environmen­tal problems.

‘Absolutely against it’

But those assurances are of little comfort to many in the region, particular­ly Fukushima’s fishing industry which, like local farmers, has suffered from the outside perception that food from the region is unsafe.

Kyoichi Kamiyama, director of the radioactiv­ity research department at the regional government’s Fisheries and Marine Science Research Centre, points out that local fishermen are still struggling eight years after the disaster.

“Dischargin­g into the ocean? I’m absolutely against it,” he told AFP.

At the national government level, the view is more sanguine.

“We want to study how to minimize the damage (from a potential discharge) to the region’s reputation and Fukushima products,” an Industry Ministry official said.

The government is sensitive to fears that people inside Japan and further afield will view any discharge as sending radioactiv­e waste into the sea.

No decisions are likely in the nearterm, with the country sensitive to the internatio­nal spotlight that will fall on Japan as it hosts the Olympic Games next year.

Environmen­talists are also resolutely opposed to any discharge into the sea, and Greenpeace argues that TEPCO cannot trusted to properly decontamin­ate the water.

The solution, said Greenpeace senior nuclear specialist Shaun Burnie, “ultimately can only be longterm storage and processing.”

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? This file photo taken on Jan. 31, 2018 shows, from left, unit 1 to unit 4 reactor buildings and storage tanks for contaminat­ed water at the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture.
AFP-Yonhap This file photo taken on Jan. 31, 2018 shows, from left, unit 1 to unit 4 reactor buildings and storage tanks for contaminat­ed water at the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture.
 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? A Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) researcher shows processed water where tritium remains at a lab in Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture, Oct. 2.
AFP-Yonhap A Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) researcher shows processed water where tritium remains at a lab in Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture, Oct. 2.

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