Fukushima
moves radioactive water as it braces for Typhoon Francisco
Japan’s
Fukushima nuclear power plant is bracing itself for Typhoon
Francisco, set to hit the country this weekend, by quickly securing
new storage space for contaminated rainwater that has already taken
up the facility’s entire storage tank capacity.
RT,
24
October, 2013
The
plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), has been
struggling to keep radiation under control ever since the nuclear
disaster that took place March 11, 2011, when three of the plant’s
reactors were hit by a tsunami, which was triggered by an underground
earthquake off the coast of Fukushima. The damaged power plant has
been accumulating radioactive water since, but TEPCO is running out
of space quickly.
This October 23, 2013, NASA satellite
image shows Typhoon Francisco in the Pacific Ocean. (AFP Photo /
NASA)
The
three underground pools proposed for storage have a total capacity of
9,000 tons. TEPCO stopped using similar models in April, after the
discovery of leaks.
On
Wednesday TEPCO said it found 140,000 becquerels of Beta radiation in
a ditch at the power plant – double the figure of the previous day.
TEPCO says this water is now being transferred to a storage tank.
The
typhoon emergency measures come at a particularly anxious time for
Fukushima, where workers are preparing for their
most dangerous cleanup
operation yet, which is slated for November. The operator will
attempt to remove 400 tons of spent fuel from Reactor No. 4.
The
need for the November operation is increasingly urgent, even
critical: any light tremor – let alone a full-on earthquake –
could trigger a series of catastrophic leaks, possibly resulting in
the world’s most severe radiological disaster yet.
Recently,
as it became clear that nuclear containment costs and a battered
economy were taking their toll on finances, the government was forced
to step in with funds to try and get the cleanup back on track.
A
20 kilometer no-go zone is currently imposed around the Fukushima
plant.
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