It
looks as if it is going ahead – as early as next week.
Fukushima:
now for the tough part
The
operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant will as early as
this week begin removing 400 tonnes of highly irradiated spent fuel
in a hugely delicate and unprecedented operation fraught with risk.
12
November, 2013
Carefully
plucking more than 1,500 brittle and potentially damaged fuel
assemblies from the plant's unstable Reactor No. 4 is expected to
take about a year, and will be seen as a test of Tokyo Electric Power
Co's ability to move ahead with decommissioning the whole facility -
a task likely to take decades and cost tens of billions of dollars.
If
the rods - there are 50-70 in each of the assemblies, which weigh
around 300 kg (660 pounds) and are 4.5 meters (15 feet) long - are
exposed to air or if they break, huge amounts of radioactive gases
could be released into the atmosphere.
The
hazardous removal operation has been likened by Arnie Gundersen, a
veteran U.S. nuclear engineer and director of Fairewinds Energy
Education, to trying to pull cigarettes from a crushed pack.
When
the time comes, extracting spent fuel from the plant's other
reactors, where radiation levels are much higher because of core
meltdowns, will be even more challenging. Reactors No. 1 and No. 3
sustained heavier damage than No. 4 as a result of the March 2011
earthquake and tsunami that knocked out power and cooling at the
Fukushima station, triggering three meltdowns that sent a plume of
radiation into the air and nearby Pacific Ocean.
The
urgency to clear Reactor No. 4 of the fuel assemblies is because of
the risk in having spent fuel stored at such a height - some 18
meters above ground level - in a building that has buckled and tilted
and could collapse if another quake strikes.
Also,
if the pool housing the fuel assemblies is punctured and the water
drains away, there could be a fire that releases more radiation than
during the 2011 disaster, threatening Tokyo, some 200 kms (125 miles)
to the south.
"Full
release from the Unit-4 spent fuel pool, without any containment or
control, could cause by far the most serious radiological disaster to
date," independent consultants Mycle Schneider and Antony
Froggatt wrote in a recent World Nuclear Industry Status Report.
CHALLENGING
TEST
Tokyo
Electric, or Tepco, has shored up Reactor No. 4 and erected a giant
steel frame over the top of the building which lost its roof in the
2011 explosion. It says the building can withstand shaking similar to
the 2011 quake.
The
utility has removed the larger debris left from that explosion from
the pool that has been cooling the fuel assemblies for the past two
and a half years. As the water used to cool the rods has had to be
pumped in from the ocean, there is a risk that some may have corroded
from the seawater.
Tepco
has already removed two unused fuel assemblies from the pool in a
test operation at Reactor No. 4 last year, but these rods are less
dangerous than the spent bundles. Extracting spent fuel is a normal
part of a nuclear plant's operations, but there is little normal
about Fukushima today.
Widely
criticized for a series of missteps in its handling of the
post-disaster clean-up, Tepco says it recognizes the operation will
be difficult, but believes it can carry it out safely. The utility
has struggled to stop radioactive water overflowing from another part
of the Fukushima facility, and experts have questioned whether it
should still be in charge of the clean-up and decommissioning.
Tepco
says the assembly removal process will begin around mid-November,
withholding the actual date for what it says are security reasons.
"I
agree with doing Unit 4 first as it may give them some experience as
to how to approach the more difficult jobs at Units 1-3," said
Dale Bridenbaugh, a former General Electric engineer and manager, who
has previously worked at Japanese nuclear plants including Fukushima
Daiichi's Reactor No. 1. "It will also provide a pathway for use
in deciding how to move the remaining fuel and debris from Units
1-3."
TRUSTING
TEPCO
The
steel frame that now perches above the damaged reactor holds the
cranes that will pluck the 1,331 used radiated fuel assemblies, which
are packed tightly together, and another 202 unused assemblies also
stored in Reactor No. 4's cooling pool. The cranes and equipment
normally used to extract used fuel from the reactor's core were
destroyed in the disaster.
The
fuel assemblies are held in a 10 x 12 meter concrete pool, the base
of which is on the fourth storey of the complex. The assemblies -
which contain plutonium, one of the most toxic substances known - are
under 7 meters of water.
"They
must be handled one by one, very carefully," Shunichi Tanaka,
the chairman of Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority, said after
approving the operation recently.
The
assemblies must first be pulled from their storage racks and
individually placed in a heavy steel chamber - kept all the while
under water to prevent overheating. The chamber, which weighs around
90 tonnes when filled and shields the radiation pulsating from the
rods, is then removed from the pool, lowered to ground level and
transported by trailer to a common storage pool in an undamaged
building about 100 meters away.
Teams
of six will operate in 2-hour shifts, with as many as three rotations
each day, manually guiding and operating the cranes that will
transfer the rods, Tepco said.
Spokesman
Yoshikazu Nagai said Tepco will carry out a test operation for moving
the heavy chamber later on Wednesday.
"A
lot of debris fell into the fuel pool as a result of the March 2011
hydrogen explosion. The large pieces of debris have been removed,"
Takashi Hara, a Tepco employee in charge of the fuel removal, told
reporters during a recent plant tour. "If, for some reason, the
water levels drop, the fuel would quickly heat up," he added.
The
operation to remove all the fuel would normally take about 100 days,
and Tepco initially planned to take two years before halving that
timeframe in recognition of the urgency.
"We
are all worried ... Every day we read news about the plant, and we
are aware of their plans to remove the spent fuel rods," said
Ichiro Kazawa, 61, a former real estate manager from the nearby town
of Hirono. He lost his home to the tsunami and now lives in temporary
housing.
"Everybody's
concerned and just hoping there will be no major accidents. No one
here trusts Tokyo Electric."
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