Options
evaluated for leaking Hanford tanks
28
February, 2013
Officials
at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are considering a
number of options to deal with six leaking waste tanks there,
including building a plant that would turn the waste into glass.
Another
option is to put covers over the tanks to prevent rainfall from
getting in.
Jane
Hedges of the Washington state Department of Ecology says two such
covers already have been installed at the Hanford nuclear
reservation's tank farms and have decreased the amount of moisture
getting into the tanks.
She
told members of the state Senate Energy, Environment and
Telecommunications committee on Thursday that state and federal
officials are still evaluating their options for controlling the
leaks.
“I
think the most important thing that we heard today is currently there
is no threat to human life and health to the Tri Cities area and
throughout Washington state,” said Senator Doug Erickson.
The
leaking tanks are between 5 and 8 miles from the Columbia River and
hundreds of feet above the water table, so it would take decades for
water to become contaminated.
There
are 177 tanks at Hanford – 28 of them have double shells, with one
tank inside another; 149 of them have single shells.
All
of the single-shell tanks have been declared unfit and must be
emptied and removed. Six tanks are leaking.
The
radioactive material in the tanks is extremely reactive and always
changing, so draining them could be dangerous.
The
long-term plan to deal with the problem is to build a chemical
treatment plant.
“It
is an extremely complex facility, probably the most complex chemical
facility in the United States, because of the type of waste it has to
treat,” said Hedges.
The
solution, called vitrification, would turn the radioactive waste into
glass, which would then be put into cylinders.
Although
the glass would still be radioactive, there would be no risk of it
leaking into the ground or water.
The
facility will cost hundreds of millions of dollars and the Department
of Ecology estimates it won’t be finished until 2019.
Until
then, there will be interim solutions such as putting a barrier
around the leaking tanks.
Q&A
with Jeremy Rifkin on nuclear power
Fukushima
Daiichi worker dies — Had been preparing cover for Unit No.
1 March, 2013
At
around 9:20 AM on February 25, at the material storage of cooperative
company in Hirono Town, Fukushima Prefecture, a cooperative company
worker who was engaged in the preparation for cover installation on
Unit 3 Reactor Building reported being sick. The worker was
transported to the medical clinic in J-Village. As cardiopulmonary
arrest was confirmed at the clinic, an ambulance was called at 9:35
AM. After cardiac massage was performed, the worker’s pulse was
recovered at 9:54 AM. At 10:10 AM, the worker was transported to
Iwaki Kyoritsu Hospital by ambulance. Later, we received an
announcement from the main contractor
that he was pronounced dead by a doctor at 11:32 PM on February 27.
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