TEPCO
forced to shut down contaminated water processing system at Fukushima
Daiichi again
2
December, 2013
Workers
at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant are working
around the clock to cool reactors and spent fuel pools. They are
accumulating massive amounts of highly contaminated water from the
cooling operations and running out of space to store it on-site.
The
troubled Advanced Liquid Processing System, or ALPS, which TEPCO has
placed so much responsibility for helping process highly radioactive
water to prepare it for storage, has broken down once again during
trial operations.
The
ALPS design removes radioactive materials by moving contaminated
water through various pretreatment stations and adsorption towers.
Once processed, the waste materials are transferred to high integrity
containers, which are transported to a temporary storage facility.
The
first processing systems used at Fukushima Daiichi only removed
cesium. The ALPS system is a multi-nuclide removal system, which
does remove multiple radioactive materials, but still leaves some
behind (like tritium).
TEPCO
workers were forced to shut the ALPS system down on Sunday due to a
leak of hydrochloric acid from a pipe joint. The hydrochloric acid
is used to neutralize alkaline water.
After
shutting down the system, workers wrapped the leaking joint with a
vinyl bag, which collected over 1 liter of hydrochloric acid at the
time of the press release.
The
system which was shut down is one of the two units which were in
trial operation and scheduled to go into full operation on Sunday.
TEPCO said that the leaking unit has been placed on standby and
cannot continue operations until the problem is corrected.
TEPCO
has been facing severe criticism for its failed management of
contaminated water at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. Katsuhiko Ikeda,
the secretary general for the Nuclear Regulation Authority, said in
October that many of the problems at the crippled facility are caused
by a lack of basic checks.
During
test runs in June, TEPCO identified that some of the batch treatment
tanks had holes in the welds.
In
July, the ALPS system was shut down for inspections after corroded
parts and other problems were identified.
The
system failed again in September after a rubber sheet left in one of
the tanks obstructed the flow of water and clogged a drain.
In
October, the system was shut down due to programming errors and
mistakes. Last month, the system was shut down once again, after the
water which was being processed began to corrode one of the tanks.
Critics
are worried that TEPCO is relying too much on the ALPS system and do
not have enough contingency options if the system is unable to
perform as expected.
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