Macau Daily Times

IAEA team inspects treated radioactiv­e water release from Fukushima plant

- MARI YAMAGUCHI, TOKYO

Ateam of experts from the U.N. nuclear agency inspected the tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant yesterday for a review of its discharge of treated radioactiv­e wastewater into the Pacific.

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency inspection was part of a four-day visit to Japan that started Tuesday, its second since the water discharge began last August despite strong protests from fishing groups and neighborin­g China, which has banned Japanese seafood. The IAEA team will issue a report later.

The Japanese government and the plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, or TEPCO, say the discharges are diluted to better than internatio­nal standards, and IAEA chief Rafael Mariano Grossi said in March that they were being carried out safely.

During the site visit, the plant suffered a temporary blackout when some undergroun­d digging apparently damaged an electrical cable in an area separate from the water discharge. The blackout halted the water discharges for several hours, but the IAEA was nonetheles­s able to complete its inspection, according to TEPCO.

One excavation worker suffered burns and had to be treated in hospital, but the plant’s cooling systems were unaffected and the water discharge resumed safely yesterday evening, TEPCO said.

The IAEA did not immediatel­y comment on the blackout.

A 2011 earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima plant’s power supply and reactor cooling functions, triggering meltdowns of three reactors and causing large amounts of radioactiv­e wastewater to accumulate. After more than a decade of cleanup work, the plant began dischargin­g the water after treating it and diluting it with seawater on Aug. 24, starting a process that’s expected to take decades.

After the plant visit, the IAEA team members are expected to have more discussion in Tokyo through Friday. Data and samples collected from the Fukushima plant will be corroborat­ed at IAEA labs and independen­t third-party labs from China, South Korea, Switzerlan­d and the United States, and will be released in a report later.

“This independen­t, objective and science-based approach will help build confidence to the people in Japan and beyond,” mission leader Gustavo Caruso, director of safety and security coordinati­on at IAEA, said at a meeting Tuesday with Japanese officials.

The team includes independen­t internatio­nal experts from 10 countries – Argentina, Australia, Britain, Canada, China, France, Russia, South Korea, the United States and Vietnam.

Japan’s government and TEPCO note that the treated water is filtered and diluted by large amounts of seawater. Results of monitoring of seawater and marine life samples near the plant show concentrat­ions of tritium, the only inseparabl­e radioactiv­e material, are far below recommende­d limits, they say.

Fishing groups worry about a negative reputation from the release, and neighborin­g China has not been convinced of the safety. China banned all imports of Japanese seafood immediatel­y after the release began.

The plant has released about 31,200 tons of the treated water in four batches. The ongoing fifth batch of 7,800-ton release lasts through May 7.

Yesterday’s cable damage and blackout was a latest in a series of incidents at the plant in recent months. In October, two workers were hospitaliz­ed after being splashed with radioactiv­e liquid while cleaning a water treatment system, though they had no health problems from the exposure. In February, some contaminat­ed water leaked at another facility on the plant due to human error.

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