Imperial Valley Press

Toshiba unveils device for Fukushima nuclear reactor probe

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YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) — Toshiba Corp.’s energy systems unit on Friday unveiled a long telescopic pipe carrying a pan-tilt camera designed to gather crucial informatio­n about the situation inside the reactor chambers at Japan’s tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant.

The device is 43 feet long and designed to give officials a deeper view into the nuclear plant’s Unit 2 primary containmen­t vessel, where details on melted fuel damage remain largely unknown.

The Fukushima plant had triple meltdowns following the 2011 quake and tsunami.

Finding details about the fuel debris is crucial to determinin­g the right method and technology for its removal at each reactor, the most challengin­g process to safely carry out the plant’s decades-long decommissi­oning.

Japan’s stricter, post-Fukushima safety standards also require nuclear plant operators elsewhere to invest more time and money into safety measures.

On Friday, Kansai Electric Power Co. announced that it would decommissi­on two idle reactors at the Ohi Nuclear Power Plant in western Japan, citing the difficulty of adding all the safety requiremen­ts at the nearly 40-year-old reactors that would be needed to get approval for their restart.

Reports have said it would cost about $500 million and take 30 years to decommissi­on a reactor, about half the estimated cost to restart one.

Also Friday, Japan Nuclear Fuel said that it was postponing the planned launch of its trouble-plagued spent fuel reprocessi­ng plant by three more years until 2021.

It cited delayed approval by the authoritie­s. It also said it was postponing the planned manufactur­ing of fuel from recycled plutonium and uranium.

The mission involving Toshiba’s new probe at Fukushima’s Unit 2 reactor could come as soon as late January.

Company officials said the new device will be sent inside the pedestal, a structure directly below the core, to investigat­e the area and hopefully to find melted debris.

The device looks like a giant fishing rod about 4.7 inches in diameter, from which a unit housing the camera, a dosimeter and thermomete­r slowly slides down.

The probe, attached by a cable on the back, can descend all the way to the bottom of the reactor vessel if it can avoid obstacles, officials said.

Two teams of several engineers will be tasked with the mission, which they will remotely operate from a radiation-free command center at the plant.

A simpler predecesso­r to the pipe unveiled Friday had captured a limited view of the vessel during a preparator­y investigat­ion in February.

A crawling robot sent in later in February struggled with debris on the ground and stalled in the end due to higher-than-expected radiation, its intended mission incomplete.

 ??  ?? Toshiba Corp. unveiled its pan-tilt camera design with the Internatio­nal Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissi­oning (IRND), to inspect interior of damaged primary containmen­t vessel of Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station Unit 2 in Yokohama,...
Toshiba Corp. unveiled its pan-tilt camera design with the Internatio­nal Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissi­oning (IRND), to inspect interior of damaged primary containmen­t vessel of Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station Unit 2 in Yokohama,...

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