The Guardian (USA)

Japan to release 1m tonnes of contaminat­ed Fukushima water into the sea – reports

- Justin McCurry in Tokyo

Japan’s government has reportedly decided to release more than 1m tonnes of contaminat­ed water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant into the sea, setting it on a collision course with local fishermen who say the move will destroy their industry.

Media reports said work to release the water, which is being stored in more than 1,000 tanks, would begin in 2022 at the earliest and would take decades to complete.

An official decision could come by the end of the month, the Kyodo news agency said, ending years of debate over what to do with the water, with other options including evaporatio­n or the constructi­on of more storage tanks at other sites.

The government, however, has long indicated it prefers the option of releasing it into the nearby Pacific, despite opposition from local fishermen who say it will undo years of work rebuilding their industry’s reputation since the plant was wrecked by a huge tsunami in March 2011.

In response, the government has said it will promote Fukushima produce and address concerns among fishermen that consumers will shun their seafood once the water is released.

Environmen­tal groups also oppose the move, while neighbouri­ng South Korea, which still bans seafood imports from the region, has repeatedly voiced concern, claiming that dischargin­g the water represente­d a ”grave threat” to the marine environmen­t.

Pressure to decide the water’s fate has been building as storage space on the nuclear plant site runs out, with the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power ( Tepco), estimating all of the available tanks will be full by the summer of 2022.

As of last month, 1.23m tonnes of water, which becomes contaminat­ed when it mixes with water used to prevent the three damaged reactor cores from melting, were being stored in 1,044 tanks, with the amount of waste water increasing by 170 tonnes a day.

Tepco’s Advanced Liquid Processing System removes highly radioactiv­e substances from the water but the system is unable to filter out tritium, a radioactiv­e isotope of hydrogen that nuclear power plants routinely dilute and dump along with water into the ocean.

A panel of experts advising the government said earlier this year that releasing the water was among the most “realistic options”.

Experts say tritium, a radioactiv­e isotope of hydrogen, is only harmful to humans in very large doses, while the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency says it is possible to dilute filtered waste water with seawater before it is released into the ocean.

The water at Fukushima Daiichi will be diluted inside the plant before it is released so that it is 40 times less concentrat­ed, with the whole process taking 30 years, according to the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper.

Hiroshi Kishi, president of a nationwide federation of fisheries cooperativ­es, voiced opposition to the move in a meeting with the chief cabinet secretary, Katsunobu Kato, this week.

Kato told reporters that a decision on the water “should be made quickly” to avoid further delays in decommissi­oning the plant – a costly, complex operation that is expected to take around 40 years.

 ??  ?? Reactor buildings and storage tanks for contaminat­ed water at the Tokyo Electric Power company’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant Photograph: Kazuhiro Nogi/AFP via Getty Images
Reactor buildings and storage tanks for contaminat­ed water at the Tokyo Electric Power company’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant Photograph: Kazuhiro Nogi/AFP via Getty Images

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