Radioactive
leaks continue to plague Fukushima, new Unit 3 problem found
Highly
radioactive water, believed to have leaked from one of the damaged
reactors, has been detected inside Unit 3 Reactor at the compromised
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. There's been no leakage to the
outside of the building, TEPCO announced.
RT,
22
January, 2014
According
to Asia's largest utility, the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO),
water leakage was identified for the first time by a robot removing
debris on the first floor of Unit 3 Reactor at the Fukushima plant.
Video filmed by the robot shows highly radioactive water, found to
contain high levels of radioactive cesium and cobalt. On Saturday,
one of the workers who was busy monitoring the robotic device's
screen, discovered that water was leaking to the drainage ditch in
the northeast area of first floor, where the main steam isolation
valve is located.
The
reactor has been steadily cooled. The company said it will continue
investigating the cause and the spot of the leakage, without
interrupting the decommissioning work.
Since
the outbreak of the Fukushima disaster in March 2011, leakage of
radiation-contaminated water has posed a major threat to Japan’s
population and environment, and to the international community.
The
operator of the stricken atomic plant has been using robotic devices
to remove the debris inside the Unit 3 Reactor building since July
2013, when TEPCO acknowledged the fact that contaminated water has
been escaping from basements and trenches of the Fukushima plant into
the ocean. Since then, the operator reported two major leaks of
highly radioactive water into the ocean from storage tanks – a
300-ton leak in August and 430 liters in October.
In
March 2011 an earthquake triggered a tsunami that hit Japan’s
coast, damaging the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The
catastrophe caused the meltdown of three nuclear reactors at the
facility, leading to the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.
Almost three years later, TEPCO is still facing a major challenge to
contain radioactive water at the site, amid harsh criticism and calls
to put Fukushima-related work under government control.
This handout picture taken by Tokyo
Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) on November 26, 2013 shows TEPCO workers
operating to move a spent fuel rod to a cask, in the storage pool as
TEPCO transfers the fuel rods from crippled unit four reactor
building to the pool at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant at
Okuma town in Fukushima prefecture. (AFP/TEPCO)
Last
week a new plan, set to provide for a decades-long Fukushima cleanup,
compensate victims, and put Tokyo's electric utility on a "solid
financial footing",
was unveiled by TEPCO.
At
the Fukushima Daiichi plant, the plan calls for additional resources
and major improvements in water management, including cleaning of all
contaminated water (except Tritium) within the next fiscal year. It
also sets the goal of removing nuclear fuel debris from at least one
of the damaged reactors by the first half of 2020. Technological
breakthroughs are envisaged to become a key part of the three-decade
decommissioning plan for Fukushima. The plan also highlights the
company's recently announced decision to turn undamaged units 5 and 6
into research centers, to improve the ability to proceed with the
cleanup and add to the overall decommissioning capabilities of the
new entity.
There
has been a spike of radiation in the area since the beginning of the
year. By early January, nuclear radiation at the boundaries of the
atomic plant had reached eight times government safety guidelines.
The levels of nuclear radiation around Fukushima’s No. 1 plant have
risen to 8 millisieverts per year, surpassing the government standard
of 1 milliseviert per year, news site Asahi Shimbun reported, citing
TEPCO. In mid-January, a record high level of beta rays released
from radioactive
strontium-90 (a
radioactive isotope of strontium produced by nuclear fission with a
half-life of 28.8 years) was detected beneath the No. 2 reactor's
well facing the ocean, according to the facility’s operator. TEPCO
hopes to solve the problem by freezing the ground around the reactors
so that no groundwater can pass through it.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.