USA TODAY International Edition

More leaks at Japan nuke site

Radioactiv­e water leaking from tanks at plant damaged by March 2011 tsunami and earthquake.

- Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO Japan's top nuclear regulator raised safety concerns Monday about hastily built storage tanks and their foundation­s at the damaged Fukushima Dai- chi power plant after signs of new leaks of radioactiv­e water.

The latest leak was found over the weekend in a connecting pipe. The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Pow- er Co., said it suspects there may also have been leaks from three storage tanks because elevated radioactiv­ity was detected near them. The levels were not considered deadly.

Nuclear Regulation Authority Chairman Shunichi Tanaka told a news conference that the small leak and possible other leaks have added to concerns about the plant's stability.

They follow a major leak two weeks ago. TEPCO reported a loss of 300 tons of highly radioactiv­e water from a steel tank on Aug. 19, saying most of it is believed to have seeped undergroun­d but some might have escaped into the sea. The company has yet to determine the cause or exactly where the water went.

The leakage of water that had been used to cool the plant's three melted reactor cores triggered fears of similar leaks from more than 300 other similar tanks. The tanks are part of approximat­ely 1,000 tanks holding 330,000 tons of contaminat­ed water at the plant, where the radioactiv­e waste water from the reactors grows by 400 tons daily.

The latest leaks have triggered further concerns about the plant's ability to manage the contaminat­ed water. Experts have said that radioactiv­e water from undergroun­d and utility tunnels connected to reactors and turbine buildings has been leaking into the sea for some time.

Tanaka said he believed the discoverie­s of the subsequent leak and signs of possible additional leaks were the result of closer inspection­s after the large leak two weeks ago. That leak was the worst from a tank at the plant, which was badly damaged by a massive March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Tanaka raised concerns about the safety of the foundation­s of the tank sites. TEPCO recently revealed that one of the tank sites had partially sunk during a test to see if a tank was watertight.

“Because those tanks were built in an emergency situation, it is questionab­le whether sufficient ground surveys were conducted,” Tanaka said. “We believe experience­d companies did a fine job, but we still have concerns and we must step up our watch for leaks.”

TEPCO said the minor leak found Saturday had stopped after workers tightened bolts on the seam of a connecting pipe. Radioactiv­e water inside the suspected tanks was to be moved to nearby tanks as a precaution.

The investigat­ion into the tanks has revealed sloppy record keeping and tank management by TEPCO. The company has acknowledg­ed that it used only two workers to inspect all 1,000 tanks in about two hours until the leak, and none of the tanks had water gauges. TEPCO has increased the staff to nearly 60 and is adding other early detection measures. TEPCO also said it overlooked signs of leaks for more than a month.

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