The
Japanese persist, by heroism or by folly I can't fathom, to believe
that they have a functioning society on top of a nuclear waste dump.
Fukushima is an extinction event for Honshu at the very least. And
now they want to restart more nuclear power stations. Doubling down
on the debt already owed to death.
--David
Petraltis
TEPCO
confronts new problem of radioactive water at Fukushima plant
26
December, 2015
Tokyo
Electric Power Co. has unexpectedly been forced to deal with an
increasingly large amount radioactive water accumulating at the
crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant after seaside walls to
block the flow of groundwater were constructed in October.
TEPCO
completed the walls on Oct. 26 to block contaminated groundwater from
flowing into sea. The utility began pumping up groundwater from five
wells dug between the walls and the plant's reactor buildings. The
plan called for releasing the less contaminated water into the sea
after a purification process, but TEPCO discovered that the water had
larger amounts of radiation than it had expected.
TEPCO
officials said the situation has left the utility with no option but
to transfer 200 to 300 tons of groundwater each day into highly
contaminated reactor buildings since November, a move that could
further contaminate the water.
Comprised
of numerous cylindrical steel pipes measuring 30 meters tall, the
seaside walls were installed on the coastal side of the No. 1 to No.
4 reactor buildings to block contaminated groundwater flowing out of
the highly contaminated buildings from reaching the ocean.
To
control groundwater levels, TEPCO planned to release the less
contaminated groundwater from the five wells into sea after a
purification process.
However,
the water from four of the wells was discovered to have high levels
of tritium--a radioactive substance that is hard to remove--at levels
higher than 1,500 becquerels per liter, which means the water cannot
be released into sea.
To
compound the problem, the seaside walls have also significantly
raised groundwater levels, forcing the utility to pump a lot more
groundwater than it originally planned.
TEPCO
has been forced to temporarily transfer large amounts of the
groundwater into highly contaminated reactor buildings, where it
could become contaminated to an even further degree by being exposed
to melted nuclear fuel.
The
utility said it suspects the high levels of radiation found in the
groundwater from the wells is due to the water being exposed to
highly contaminated soil near the plant’s coastal embankment.
To
reduce the amount of contaminated water at the plant, TEPCO began
operations in September to pump up the groundwater in wells
constructed around the reactor buildings to release it into the sea
after a purification process.
The
company initially announced that the project had reduced the amount
of groundwater flowing into the contaminated reactor buildings from
300 tons to 200 tons a day.
The
increasing amount of contaminated water has been stored in tanks
constructed in the plant’s compound after going through operations
to reduce contamination.
TEPCO
plans to increase the amount of water it pumps from wells located
elsewhere on the plant site to help reduce the amount of contaminated
groundwater accumulating in the seaside wells.
Company
officials admitted they are not sure when it can turn things around
and reduce the amount of contaminated water at the Fukushima plant.
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