Fukushima
tritium levels spike 15-fold in three days
In
just three days, readings of tritium in groundwater near the wrecked
Fukushima nuclear plant have soared more than 15 times, the operator
of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant admitted.
RT,
12
September, 2013
Results
of recently tested water taken from the well some 20 meters south
from a number of storage tanks have showed that levels of tritium
have now reached 64,000 becquerels per liter.
Back
on September 9, the level of tritium – a potentially dangerous
radioactive isotope – from the same location stood at 29,000
compared to 4,200 becquerels per liter on Sunday.
On
Monday a new hotspot of radiation was detected in groundwater from an
observation well next to a faulty water storage tank. Some 3,200
becquerels per liter of radioactive substances were recorded in the
well.
Prior
to that the company announced the discovery of 650 becquerels per
liter of radioactive waste in another well, located about 20 meters
south of the storage tank.
TEPCO
said in the recent press-release it will continue monitoring the
situation and will keep investigating the “leakage
range”.
Last month TEPCO reported 300 tonnes of highly contaminated
groundwater seeping into the Pacific Ocean daily.
Meanwhile,
September, 11 marks two-and-a half years since triple meltdowns,
caused by an earthquake and tsunami in March 2011. With a crisis over
radiation-contaminated water at the plant, Tepco Electric has been
criticized for its ad hoc response to the disaster.
As
Tokyo beat Madrid and Istanbul to host the 2020 Olympics, Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe said he would be personally responsible for a
plan to cope with the consequences.
Fukushima
Monumental Hurdles Before Olympic "Games" Update 9/10/13
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