Tepco’s
Claim Radiation Leaks Confined to Coast Called ‘Silly’
Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s (9501) claim that radioactive water leaking into the sea from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant is confined to the coast doesn’t make scientific sense, according to a U.S. researcher who surveyed waters off the site last month.
International
Rules
Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s (9501) claim that radioactive water leaking into the sea from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant is confined to the coast doesn’t make scientific sense, according to a U.S. researcher who surveyed waters off the site last month.
6
October, 2013
Japan’s
government has supported the utility’s statement that the
irradiated groundwater flowing into the Pacific Ocean at a rate of
some 400 tons a day remains in an area of 0.3 square kilometers (0.12
square miles) within the bay fronting the atomic station.
“These
statements like a 0.3 square-kilometer zone are silly,” Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution senior scientist Ken Buesseler said in an
interview. “It’s not true to the science,” said Buesseler, who
was on a Japanese research vessel 1 kilometer (0.6 miles) off
Fukushima from Sept. 8 to Sept. 14.
The
growing stockpile of radioactive water stored in tanks at the plant
and leaks from the tanks into the sea is an increasing threat to
ocean ecosystems, said Buesseler, who holds a joint Ph.D in marine
chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods
Hole. Founded in 1930, Woods Hole is the world’s largest private
non-profit oceanographic research institution, according to its
website.
The
Fukushima atomic station has more than 1,000 tanks holding more than
380,000 tons of water irradiated from contact with melted reactor
fuel. Three hundred tanks are of a bolted variety, at least one of
which leaked about 300 tons of water. Additional contaminated
groundwater has been seeping into the Pacific Ocean and one of the
tanks overflowed last week.
Each
tank contains about 10 terabequerels, or 270 curies, of strontium-90,
a radioactive element linked to leukemia that can enter the food
chain by depositing into the bones of fish, Buesseler said. That is
100 times the amount of radioactivity dumped by Russia into the Sea
of Japan in a 1993 incident that prompted international rules against
ocean disposal.
“If
only 10 of those tanks leaked it would equal all the strontium
released in 2011” after the earthquake and tsunami, Buesseler said.
“Once strontium gets into fish, it stays in them for months and
years and it’s going to be an additional reason why they won’t be
able to open up their fisheries.”
“One
hundred kilometers away I can measure isotopes of cesium that are
coming from the reactor” in Fukushima, Buesseler said. “They’re
not at dangerous levels. The scientific question is are they at
levels high enough to accumulate in the food chain and a cause for
some of the fish to be above the legal limit.”
Monitoring
Data
Tokyo
Electric’s own monitoring data show radiation levels beyond the
immediate area around the plant to be “limited,” said spokesman
Yoshikazu Nagai, who added that the company recognizes the importance
of carefully managing contaminated water in storage at the site.
“We
recognize that tank management is one of our most important issues so
will continue making efforts to control contaminated water,” he
said.
Last
month, South Korea banned imports of marine products from water off
Fukushima and adjacent prefectures, citing public health concerns.
Japanese
officials at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna tried
to assuage global concern over the impact of Fukushima’s radiation
last month.
“The
effect of the contaminated water is limited to the 0.3 square
kilometers just within the port outside of the plant,” said Japan’s
science and technology minister, Ichita Yamamoto, on Sept. 16.
4,000
Meters
“The
credibility problem is as great as the engineering solution,” said
Buesseler, who has traveled to Japan multiple times to assess
Fukushima’s impact on the ocean ecosystems. “There’s a lack of
trust that they keep reinforcing by saying things like ‘beyond this
0.3 kilometers zone there’s no release.’”
For
Japan to reduce the risk of Fukushima’s radiation entering the food
chain, it may consider pumping effluent below 4,000 meters, said
Stony Brook University marine biologist Nicholas Fisher in an
interview. Before the practice was banned, the International Atomic
Energy Agency developed best-practice guidelines for disposing of
waste in deep water.
The
International Maritime Organization has prohibited ocean dumping of
radioactive material since 1996 after Russia pumped 900 tons of water
with a reported 2.18 curies of radiation into the Sea of Japan three
years earlier.
Mostly
Safe
“There’s
certainly much more living stuff in surface waters than there is in
deep waters around 4,000 meters,” said Fisher, whose lab has sent
scientists on three Fukushima ocean surveys. “There are no
fisheries that are based on anything deeper than around 900 meters.
If organisms became contaminated down around 4,000 meters, they may
not ever appear in surface waters.”
While
most fish caught for food are safe and the amount of
naturally-occurring radiation in the ocean exceeds the amount
released by Fukushima, there is a risk that contamination could
spread to larger sea creatures, he said.
Japan
should also consider new storage alternatives, according to Buesseler
and Robert Kelley, a U.S. nuclear engineer who was in charge of
emergency response at the U.S. Los Alamos National Laboratory.
“A
better solution would be to bring in tankage that already exists,
such as a decommissioned very-large crude carrier,” said Kelley,
who worked for the Department of Energy for 30 years.
Storage
Alternatives
“These
tanker ships can hold years worth of contaminated water and could be
moored in the sea close to the site while they are being filled,”
he said. “It would be a cheaper and safer alternative to building
hundreds of new tanks, possibly for years.”
Because
Japanese engineers were forced to build Fukushima storage tanks
uphill and behind the damaged reactors, any leaks will complicate the
clean-up process by creating new safety hazards for workers, Kelley
and Buesseler said.
“There’s
a lot of radioactivity stored on site in tanks,” said Buesseler,
adding that he’s concerned that even a small earthquake could
trigger another crisis. “All of those tanks are connected by pipes
to each other and those pipes and those fittings are not earthquake
proof.”
Lab
results from his most recent visit should be published by February
2014, Buesseler said.
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