Russia
Offers to Help Clean Up Fukushima as Tepco Calls for Help
Russia
repeated an offer first made two years ago to help Japan clean-up its
accident-ravaged Fukushima nuclear station, welcoming Tokyo Electric
Power Co. (9501)’s decision to seek outside help.
A worker checks radiation levels near the No. 10 storage tank in the H3 tank area at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan, in this handout photograph taken on Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013. Source: Tokyo Electric Power Co. via Bloomberg
26
August, 2013
As
Tokyo Electric pumps thousands of metric tons of water through the
wrecked Fukushima station to cool its melted cores, the tainted
run-off was found to be leaking into groundwater and the ocean. The
approach to cooling and decommissioning the station will need to
change and include technologies developed outside of Japan if the
clean-up is to succeed, said Vladimir Asmolov, first deputy director
general of Rosenergoatom, the state-owned Russian nuclear utility.
“In
our globalized nuclear industry we don’t have national accidents,
they are all international,” Asmolov said. Since Japan’s new
government took over in December, talks on cooperating between the
two countries on the Fukushima clean-up have turned “positive”
and Russia is ready to offer its assistance, he said by phone from
Moscow last week.
After
29 months of trying to contain radiation from Fukushima’s molten
atomic cores, Tokyo Electric said last week it will reach out for
international expertise in handling the crisis. The water leaks alone
have so far sent more than 100 times the annual norms of radioactive
elements into the ocean, raising concern it will enter the food chain
through fish.
‘Last
to Realize’
The
latest leak of 300 metric tons of irradiated water prompted Japan’s
nuclear regulator to label the incident “serious” and question
Tokyo Electric’s ability to deal with the crisis, echoing comments
made by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe earlier this month. Zengo Aizawa, a
vice president at Tepco, as the Tokyo-based utility is known, made
the call for help at a press briefing in Japan’s capital on Aug.
21.
“It
was clear for a long time that Tepco was not adequately coping with
the situation,” Asmolov said. “It looks like Tepco management
were the last to realize this,” he said. “Japan has the
technologies to do this, but they lacked a system to deal with this
kind of situation.”
The
Fukushima accident of March 2011 is the world’s biggest nuclear
disaster since the Soviet Union faced the explosion at Chernobyl in
1986.
So
far, Tokyo’s solution to cooling melted nuclear rods at Fukushima
that otherwise could overheat into criticality, or a self-sustained
nuclear chain reaction, has been to pour water over them. That’s
left more than 330,000 tons of irradiated water in storage tanks at
the site so far. The water is treated to remove some of the cesium
particles in it, which in turn leaves behind contaminated filters.
‘Vast
Volumes’
The
sheer quantity of water used is the most at a nuclear accident since
the 1972 London convention banned the dumping of waste and
radioactive water into the sea, said Peter Burns, formerly
Australia’s representative on the United Nations scientific
committee on the effects of atomic radiation.
“Until
they figure out how to deal with such vast volumes of water, how to
manage it, the problem” including of leaks will persist, Burns, a
retired radiation physicist, said from Melbourne.
Retaining
thousands of tons of radioactive water in tanks was the wrong
strategy from the start and Tepco’s handling of the task is a
“textbook picture of a failure of management,” Michael
Friedlander, who has 13 years of experience running nuclear stations
in the U.S., said in an interview with Bloomberg TV in Hong Kong.
Pumping
Water
The
idea of pumping water for cooling was never going to be anything but
a “machine for generating radioactive water,” Asmolov said. Other
more complex methods such as the use of special absorbents like
thermoxide to clean contaminated water and the introduction of air
cooling should be used, he said.
Russia’s
nuclear company, Rosatom, of which Rosenergoatom is a unit, sent
Japan a 5 kilogram (11 pound) sample of an absorbent that could be
used at Fukushima almost three years ago, Asmolov said. It also
formed working groups ready to help Japan on health effect
assessment, decontamination, and fuel management, among others,
Asmolov said. The assistance was never used, he said.
“Since
the arrival of the new Japanese government, the attitude’s
changed,” he said. “So far the talks have been on a diplomatic
level, but they are much more positive. And we remain open to working
together on this issue. To follow developments I monitor Fukushima
news every morning.”
Tap
Experts
Japan
can tap experts in France and the U.S. as well as Russia to help it
tackle the situation at Fukushima, he said.
The
U.S.’s long history with atomic research, including the nuclear
weapons site at the Hanford Engineer Works in Washington state, has
provided expertise in cleaning up contaminated sites, said Kathryn
Higley, who heads the nuclear engineering and radiation health
physics department at Oregon State University in Corvallis.
“We
have individuals that are working on groundwater contamination and
using technology and developing new technologies to clean up
strontium in groundwater, for example, at the Hanford site,” she
said. “So there are individuals around the world that have been
doing this and certainly they would be more than willing to help in
this process.”
France’s
Areva SA (AREVA) had designed a radiation filtration system that was
used for several months at the Fukushima site as temporary cover
before Tepco installed its own facilities. Japanese delegations have
also visited U.S. nuclear waste sites together with CH2M Hill Cos.,
an engineering company based in Englewood, Colorado.
This
month a group of 17 Japanese companies including Toshiba Corp. (6502)
and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. (7011) formed an association,
called International Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissioning,
to support Tepco’s clean-up efforts.
Experienced
Hands
The
association, which aims to research removal of spent fuel from
reactor pools and clearance of debris, plans to liaise with
international organizations such as the U.S. Department of Energy on
its work, Hajimu Yamana, head of the association, told reporters in
Tokyo on Aug. 8.
Tepco
is in talks with a team of retired U.S. government officials, who
worked on water management after the Three Mile Island accident in
1979, according to Dale Klein, the chairman of an advisory panel to
Tepco and a former head of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Klein
said the officials had served in the Department of Energy and the
NRC, declining to identify them.
“It
will be beneficial for Tepco to get people who have real live
experience in dealing with contaminated water from nuclear events,”
Klein said.
An
announcement on a deal with the contractors could come within a
month, Klein said.
Tepco’s
“experience should be in being a safe reliable electricity
generator,” said Klein. The company’s “core competencies have
not been having to deal with the massive cleanup that is now facing
them.”
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