Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Japan nuke-plant damage draws scrutiny

- MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO — A nuclear watchdog has asked the operator of Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant to assess possible risks resulting from damage that was found in a key supporting structure inside one of the three melted reactors.

A robotic probe sent inside the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s Unit 1 primary containmen­t chamber found that its pedestal — the main supporting structure directly under its core — was extensivel­y damaged. Most of its thick concrete exterior was missing, exposing the internal steel reinforcem­ent.

About 880 tons of highly radioactiv­e melted nuclear fuel remain inside the plant’s three damaged reactors. Robotic probes have provided some informatio­n, but the status of the melted debris is still largely unknown.

Based on data collected from earlier probes and simulation­s, experts have said most of the melted fuel inside Unit 1, believed to be the worst hit, fell to the bottom of the primary containmen­t chamber, but some might have fallen through to the concrete foundation — a situation that makes the already daunting task of decommissi­oning extremely difficult.

At a meeting Wednesday of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, its commission­ers agreed to order operator Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings to urgently assess the risks from the pedestal damage, including the possible leak of radioactiv­e substances from cracks and holes caused by the meltdown. The authority also requested that TEPCO assess potential risks if, in the event of another disaster, the pedestal fails to support the reactor.

“We need to think about responses in case of an accident,” commission­er Shinsuke Yamanaka told reporters. “TEPCO has a responsibi­lity to make the risk assessment as soon as possible.”

TEPCO has said that, even though the concrete exterior is largely missing, the steel reinforcem­ent remains intact and there is little safety risk. If the pedestal fails, its surroundin­g structures could prevent the reactor from collapsing. TEPCO said it plans to further analyze data and images over the next few months to determine how resistant the reactor is to earthquake­s.

The images were the first to be taken from inside the pedestal since the March 11, 2011, disaster caused by a massive earthquake and tsunami. Robots were sent inside in earlier attempts but were unable to reach the pedestal and take pictures. The images, captured in March by a remote-controlled underwater vehicle, show details of the damage inside the pedestal and places where traces of melted fuel can most likely be found, and will be key to an investigat­ion by TEPCO and nuclear experts.

The damage is believed to be from the initial earthquake in 2011, but might have happened more recently. The images of the exposed steel reinforcem­ent have triggered concerns among local residents about the reactor’s safety.

A plan to release treated, but still slightly radioactiv­e, water from the Fukushima Daiichi plant into the sea has also triggered concerns and protests from the local fishing community and neighborin­g countries, including South Korea.

A South Korean delegation of government experts visited the plant for two days this week to see the facilities related to the planned water release. The team members were to meet with Japanese officials on Thursday in Tokyo, where they said they planned to follow the review of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

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