Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fukushima plant water release plan causes uproar

- Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO – Dozens of anti-nuclear activists protested Tuesday to demand Japan scrap its plan to release treated but still radioactiv­e water from a tsunami-damaged nuclear power plant into the sea, which may begin this summer.

“Don’t dump contaminat­ed water into sea!” protesters chanted outside the Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings’ headquarte­rs in Tokyo, holding banners with their demands such as “Don’t nuke the Pacific,” and “Stop contaminat­ed water.”

The utility that operates the plant wrecked in the 2011 disaster has almost finished building the needed facilities to release the massive amounts of water, which has been speculated to begin sometime after June.

“Even after treatment, some radiation stays in the water,” said Harumichi Saito, an activist from Iwaki, a city south of the wrecked plant. “It’s a decadeslon­g, multi-generation­al project that must get public consensus.”

The tsunami and earthquake on March 11, 2011, damaged the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s cooling systems, damaging three nuclear reactors, causing their cooling water to become highly radioactiv­e and leak into the basements of the buildings. The water is collected, treated and stored in tanks that cover much of the plant.

The government and TEPCO say the tanks must be removed to make room for the plant’s decommissi­oning and to minimize the risk of leaks in case of another disaster.

The plan has faced fierce protests from local fishing communitie­s concerned about safety and reputation­al damage. Neighborin­g countries, including South Korea, China and the Pacific Island nations, have protested.

Japanese officials say the water will be filtered to far below internatio­nal releasable levels and further diluted by large amounts of seawater before release, making it harmless. However, some scientists say the impact of longterm, low-dose exposure to tritium and other radionucli­des on the environmen­t

The tsunami and earthquake on March 11, 2011, damaged the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s cooling systems, damaging three nuclear reactors.

and people is still unknown and the release should be delayed.

Several activists from South Korea joined Tuesday’s rally.

“The Pacific Ocean does not belong to Japan. It belongs to all living things in the ocean and everyone who depends on it for their livelihood­s,” said Kyoungsook Choi, a Korea Radiation Watch coordinato­r. “We are here today to send the message that Japan does not have the right to dump the radioactiv­e water.”

Tokyo and Seoul agreed recently for a South Korean delegation to visit the plant in late May to observe preparatio­ns for the release, as the two sides worked to improve ties strained by historical disputes.

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO/AP ?? Dozens of anti-nuclear activists gathered outside of the Tokyo utility operating the Fukushima nuclear power plant and demanded Japan scrap its plan to start releasing into the sea a massive stockpile of treated but still radioactiv­e water. A banner, bottom front, reads “Don’t dump contaminat­ed water into the sea.”
EUGENE HOSHIKO/AP Dozens of anti-nuclear activists gathered outside of the Tokyo utility operating the Fukushima nuclear power plant and demanded Japan scrap its plan to start releasing into the sea a massive stockpile of treated but still radioactiv­e water. A banner, bottom front, reads “Don’t dump contaminat­ed water into the sea.”

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