Green light from nuclear agency: Japan begins dumping Fukushima cooling water

Green light from nuclear authority
Japan begins dumping Fukushima cooling water

The criticism inside and outside of Japan is great. However, after both the Japanese and the International Atomic Energy Agency gave their approval, Japan’s government announced the start of discharging 1.3 million liters of cooling water from the nuclear ruins in Fukushima into the Pacific.

A good twelve years after the super meltdown in Fukushima, Japan begins the controversial discharge of treated cooling water from the Fukushima nuclear ruins into the sea. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced that dumping would start on Thursday at the earliest. His government argues that the site of the nuclear ruins is running out of space to store cooling water, thereby hampering decommissioning work.

The conservative head of government said that draining the water into the Pacific Ocean is something that “cannot be postponed”. Japan’s fisheries associations expressed their strong opposition to the last day. There are also concerns and criticisms in countries like China.

In March 2011, a severe earthquake and massive tsunami caused a core meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The reactors have to be further cooled with water stored in more than 1000 huge tanks. But now, according to the operating company Tepco, there is no space for it. In addition, long-term storage on the site threatens to impede the decommissioning work on the nuclear ruins. There is also a risk of leaks, it said. Therefore, the more than 1.3 million liters of water are to be channeled into the sea via a one-kilometer-long tunnel specially built for this purpose. This is expected to take around 30 years.

Cooling water has been piped into the seas for decades

However, before being dumped in the Pacific, the contaminated cooling water is first treated. However, the filter system cannot filter out the radioactive isotope tritium. Tepco therefore wants to dilute the water to such an extent that the tritium concentration drops to 1,500 becquerels per liter, which corresponds to less than a fortieth of the national safety standard. Japan’s nuclear regulatory agency recently gave the green light.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had previously approved the dumping plans. Japan meets international safety standards. The effects on people and the environment are “negligible”, the IAEA found. Experts point out that nuclear power plants all over the world have routinely discharged contaminated cooling water into the sea for decades. However, Japan’s fisheries associations fear that the reputation of their products will be further tarnished. You’ve been trying to recover in business since the super meltdown.

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