Philippine Daily Inquirer

Japan preparing to discharge Fukushima nuclear plant water

Tokyo says IAEA has approved plans to release treated water into the ocean by summer

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TOKYO—Japan plans to start releasing more than a million tons of treated water from the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant into the ocean this year, a top government spokespers­on said Friday.

The plan has been endorsed by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), but the government will wait for “a comprehens­ive report” by the UN watchdog before the release, chief Cabinet Sec. Hirokazu Matsuno told reporters.

Cooling systems at the plant were overwhelme­d when a massive undersea earthquake triggered a tsunami in 2011, causing the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

Decommissi­oning work is under way and expected to take around four decades.

The site produced 100 cubic meters of contaminat­ed water each day on average in the April-November period last year—a combinatio­n of groundwate­r, seawater and rainwater that seeps into the area, and water used for cooling.

Safety ensured

The water is filtered to remove various radionucli­des and moved to storage tanks, with more than 1.3 million cubic meters on site already and space running out.

“We expect the timing of the release would be sometime during this spring or summer,” after release facilities are completed and tested, and the IAEA’s comprehens­ive report is released, Matsuno said.

“The government as a whole will make the utmost efforts to ensure safety and take preventive measures against bad rumors.”

The comments are a reference to persistent concerns raised by neighborin­g countries and local fishing communitie­s about the release plan.

Fishermen in the region fear reputation­al damage from the release, after attempting for years to reestablis­h trust in their products through strict testing.

Plan criticized

Plant operator Tepco says the treated water meets national standards for radionucli­de levels, except for one element, tritium, which experts say is only harmful to humans in large doses.

It plans to dilute the water to reduce tritium levels and release it offshore over several decades via a 1-kilometer-long underwater pipe.

The IAEA has said the release meets internatio­nal standards and “will not cause any harm to the environmen­t.”

Regional neighbors including China and South Korea, and groups such as Greenpeace, have criticized the plan.

The March 2011 disaster in northeast Japan left around 18,500 people dead or missing, with most killed by the tsunami.

Tens of thousands of residents around the Fukushima plant were ordered to evacuate their homes, or chose to do so.

Around 12 percent of the Fukushima region was once declared unsafe, but now no-go zones cover around 2 percent, although population­s in many towns remain far lower than before.

 ?? —AFP ?? OUT OF SPACE Storage tanks holding 1.3 million cubic liters of filtered water from the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant are nearly full, officials say.
—AFP OUT OF SPACE Storage tanks holding 1.3 million cubic liters of filtered water from the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant are nearly full, officials say.

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