The Philippine Star

Fukushima operator releases fresh images of reactor wreckage

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TOKYO (AFP) — The operator of Fukushima’s crippled nuclear power plant has released fresh images of the wreckage inside a damaged reactor, showing broken metal parts and debris that could be melted fuel.

The Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) inserted last Friday a special camera into one of the plant’s three melteddown reactors, a company spokesman said, as part of its efforts to dismantle the disaster-hit facility in northeaste­rn Japan.

Images captured by the camera and released late Friday show rubble spread over the bottom of the unit, including part of a fuel container and rock-like fragments that could contain melted nuclear fuel.

Locating fuel debris is a key part of the plant’s decommissi­oning process, which is expected to take decades.

Due to extremely high radiation levels, the TEPCO has struggled to inspect the reactors, which melted down when the plant was hit by a huge tsunami in March 2011.

But it has recently succeeded in using cameras to visually monitor inside the units, last year releasing similar pictures of suspected fuel debris at the No. 3 reactor.

“The success in taking the latest pictures was another milestone for our decommissi­oning process,” the spokesman told AFP, adding that the operator plans to begin removing the debris in 2021.

A massive undersea earthquake on March 11, 2011 sent a tsunami barreling into Japan’s northeaste­rn coast, leaving more than 18,000 people dead or missing and sparking the Fukushima crisis, the worst such accident since Chernobyl in 1986.

The government has said that it expects total costs for decommissi­oning, decontamin­ation and compensati­on to reach 21.5 trillion yen ($194 billion).

 ?? AFP ?? Photo taken and released on Friday by the Internatio­nal Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissi­oning shows broken metal parts and debris that could be melted fuel inside the second reactor, one of the Fukushima plant’s three melted-down reactors at the crippled nuclear power plant in Okuma.
AFP Photo taken and released on Friday by the Internatio­nal Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissi­oning shows broken metal parts and debris that could be melted fuel inside the second reactor, one of the Fukushima plant’s three melted-down reactors at the crippled nuclear power plant in Okuma.

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