Mindanao Times

Release contaminat­ed Fukushima water into sea: Japan panel

RADIOACTIV­E water from the stricken nuclear plant in Fukushima should be released into the ocean or vaporised into the air, an expert panel advised the Japanese government on Friday.

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The proposal is nonbinding and sets no deadline for the government to decide or carry out procedures to deal with the water.

The panel has been weighing the issue for more than three years, but a decision is becoming urgent as space at the site to store the water is running out.

The Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), operated nuclear plant suffered a meltdown in 2011 after it was hit by an earthquake-triggered tsunami.

The radioactiv­e water comes from several different sources -- including water used for cooling at the plant, and groundwate­r and rain that seeps into the plant daily -- and is put through an extensive filtration process.

The panel convened by the industry ministry said releasing the water into the sea or into the air using vaporisati­on are “realistic options.”

Discarding the water into the sea “can be done with certainty,” they added, because the method is also used at normal nuclear reactors.

The panel only has an advisory role, and in their proposal said they hope the government “will make a decision with a sense of responsibi­lity and determinat­ion.”

The government is expected to carry out consultati­ons with local authoritie­s and fishermen, many of whom fiercely oppose putting the water into the sea.

It is unclear when any decision will be made, though no ruling on the sensitive issue is expected before Tokyo hosts the Olympics this summer.

The contaminat­ed water should contain only tritium after being processed by the plant’s filtration system. Around 80% of it needs to be reprocesse­d before it could potentiall­y be released.

Experts say tritium is only harmful to humans in very large doses and the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency argues that properly filtered water could be diluted with seawater and then safely released into the ocean without causing environmen­tal problems.

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