Highest
radiation level detected in water found in drainage ditch at
Fukushima nuclear plant
Tokyo
Electric Power Co. said it has found the highest radiation levels
recorded since it began checking water in drainage ditches in August
at its crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant
24
October, 2013
The utility
announced Oct. 24 that it had detected radioactive strontium and
other beta ray emitting substances measuring 140,000 becquerels per
liter in water sampled in one of the facility’s drainage ditches.
The legal
standard for strontium emissions is 30 becquerels per liter.
TEPCO
officials said the high radiation level was detected in water
collected on Oct. 23. The levels in water taken on Oct. 22 were
59,000 becquerels per liter.
"We
believe it stems from the effects of rain that has fallen until now
that has flushed out radioactive materials from the surrounding areas
into the drainage ditch," a TEPCO official said.
No specific
leak that can be linked to the contaminated water has yet been
discovered.
The ditch
where the high radiation levels were detected is near the tank that
was discovered in August to have leaked about 300 tons of radioactive
water. The location of the recent find was just 700 meters from where
the drainage ditch empties into the ocean.
TEPCO
workers have placed sandbags further along the ditch in an attempt to
prevent radioactive material from reaching the ocean.
Radiation
readings spiking to record levels all around Fukushima plant
Businessweek,
Oct. 23, 2013: Tepco Says
Rains Causing Spikes in Fukushima Radiation Readings
[...] Water samples from another ditch had readings of 15,000
becquerels
of beta radiation, again higher than the record 2,200 becquerels in
an Oct. 1 sample from the same site, Tepco said. Beta radiation
includes strontium-90 linked to causing cancers such as leukemia.
Bloomberg,
Oct. 23, 2013: Tepco said in a separate release that beta
radiation levels of 510,000
becquerels per liter
were found Oct. 20 in a sample of rainwater that had accumulated
between a storage tank and a cement barrier built to contain leaks.
That compares to 450,000 becquerels on Oct. 19 and 360,000 becquerels
on Oct. 18, the company said. The Oct. 20 sample was the highest
taken so far from within the barrier, the Sankei newspaper reported.
Xinhua,
Oct. 22, 2013: Radioactive
cesium levels spike in ocean near Fukushima
[...] (TEPCO) said that trace amounts of radioactive cesium-137 were
detected at a level of 1.6 becquerels per liter [1,600 becquerels per
m³] in water samples taken from the adjacent Pacific Ocean, marking
the second time such radioactive materials have been found in the sea
since surveys began in August. The previous radioactive finding in
October measured lower [...]
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