Nuke plant warning of more leaks into the sea
THE operator of the stricken Japanese nuclear power plant said yesterday that more radioactive water could begin spilling into the sea later this month if there is a glitch in setting up a new decontamination system.
Tokyo Electric Power Co also said that two workers had been exposed to radiation at more than twice the limit set by the government, the most serious case so far of exposure among hundreds of workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant.
Nearly 110,000 tons of highly radioactive water - enough to fill about 40 Olympic-size swimming pools - are stored at the plant, the utility said in a report presented to Japan's nuclear regulator yesterday.
TEPCO has pumped massive amounts of water to cool three reactors where meltdowns occurred after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disabled cooling systems.
Managing the growing pools of radioactive water is a major challenge with the start of Japan's monthlong rainy season, and the plant, on the Pacific coast 240 kilometers north of Tokyo, is running out of storage space.
"By sealing relevant areas ... we plan to prevent contaminated water from leaking into the sea," the report to the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said.
Engineers have begun installing equipment from French reactor maker Areva to decontaminate the water and TEPCO wants to start operating it by June 15.
But if the treatment system does not work, one of the reactors could run out of space to store contaminated water as early as June 20, and it could then spill into the sea. The same could happen to a second reactor a day later.
"This is a scenario that TEPCO could have anticipated. It is a serious problem that the firm has yet to take measures against this," said Junichi Sato, executive director of Greenpeace Japan. "If a big amount leaks continuously, then maritime contamination will spread even more."
TEPCO also confirmed that two workers suspected of having exceeded the government's radiation exposure limit of 250 millisieverts had indeed surpassed that figure.
The unidentified workers were exposed to up to 580 millisieverts during cleanup efforts, reporters were told. Exposure to 250 millisieverts is equivalent to more than 400 stomach X-rays.
Tokyo Electric Power Co also said that two workers had been exposed to radiation at more than twice the limit set by the government, the most serious case so far of exposure among hundreds of workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant.
Nearly 110,000 tons of highly radioactive water - enough to fill about 40 Olympic-size swimming pools - are stored at the plant, the utility said in a report presented to Japan's nuclear regulator yesterday.
TEPCO has pumped massive amounts of water to cool three reactors where meltdowns occurred after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disabled cooling systems.
Managing the growing pools of radioactive water is a major challenge with the start of Japan's monthlong rainy season, and the plant, on the Pacific coast 240 kilometers north of Tokyo, is running out of storage space.
"By sealing relevant areas ... we plan to prevent contaminated water from leaking into the sea," the report to the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said.
Engineers have begun installing equipment from French reactor maker Areva to decontaminate the water and TEPCO wants to start operating it by June 15.
But if the treatment system does not work, one of the reactors could run out of space to store contaminated water as early as June 20, and it could then spill into the sea. The same could happen to a second reactor a day later.
"This is a scenario that TEPCO could have anticipated. It is a serious problem that the firm has yet to take measures against this," said Junichi Sato, executive director of Greenpeace Japan. "If a big amount leaks continuously, then maritime contamination will spread even more."
TEPCO also confirmed that two workers suspected of having exceeded the government's radiation exposure limit of 250 millisieverts had indeed surpassed that figure.
The unidentified workers were exposed to up to 580 millisieverts during cleanup efforts, reporters were told. Exposure to 250 millisieverts is equivalent to more than 400 stomach X-rays.
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