The Boston Globe

Japan extends radiation cleanup

Residents facing years until return

- ByMari Yamaguchi

TOKYO — Radiation cleanup in some of the most contaminat­ed towns around Fukushima’s damaged nuclear power plant is behind schedule, so some residents will have to wait a few more years before returning, Japanese officials said Monday.

Environmen­t Ministry officials said they are revising the cleanup schedule for six of 11 municipali­ties in an exclusion zone from which residents were evacuated after three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant started to melt down after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

The original plan called for completing all decontamin­ation by next March.

Nobody has been allowed to resume living in the zone yet, though the government has allowed day visits to homes and businesses in some places after initial decontamin­ation, said Shigeyoshi Sato, an Environ-ment Ministry official in charge of decontamin­ation.

‘‘We will have to extend the cleanup process, by one year, two years or three years, we haven’t exactly decided yet,’’ he said.

Sato cited several reasons for the delay, including a lack of space for the waste from the decontamin­ation work. Some residents have opposed dumping the waste in their neighborho­ods.

The Asahi newspaper reported on Saturday that the government is planning an extension of up to three years in areas such as Iitate, a village northwest of the plant where a highly radioactiv­e plume spread in the first few days of the crisis.

Still, an Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency mission that visited the Fukushima area last week highlighte­d the progress Japan has made in the two years since the team’s previous visit.

‘‘The main conclusion of the mission is that Japan has achieved important progress,’’ team leader Juan Carlos Lentijo told a news conference in Tokyo onMonday.

In a preliminar­y report releasedMo­nday, the team noted good progress in the remediatio­n of farmland in some areas and monitoring that has shown the land can produce food with levels of radioactiv­ity below the permissibl­e level. It also praised Japan’s efforts to involve stakeholde­rs, noting that the leadership of some key local figures has helped gained the trust of their communitie­s.

Lentijo also stressed the need to strengthen communicat­ion with the public about the decontamin­ation work and the costs and benefits.

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