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International Atomic Energy Agency likely to inspect Japan’s crippled plant

TOKYO:

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) plans to send a team to the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant next week to evaluate the safety of Japan’s contentious plan to discharge radioactive water from the plant into the Pacific Ocean, the government said on Monday.

Japan’s Foreign and Industry Ministries said a team of IAEA experts led by Gustavo Caruso, director and coordinator of the IAEA’s Department of Nuclear Safety and Security, will visit Japan from February 14-18, reports Xinhua news agency.

The visit to the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant is likely to take place on February 15.

The visit and on-site assessment of the plant have been pushed back from December last year, as Japan was overrun by a surge in Covid-19 cases in another sluggish rollout of vaccines by the government.

Japan has said it still plans to release radioactive water that has accumulated at the plant into the Pacific Ocean.

The water, stored in tanks at the plant in Japan’s northeast, is expected to soon reach capacity.

The Fukushima plant had its key cooling functions knocked out after being battered by a massive earthquake-triggered tsunami in 2011, resulting in the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl in 1986. The polluted water that the government plans to release into the Pacific Ocean contains radioactive tritium because of being used to cool down melted nuclear fuel at the plant in Fukushima Prefecture.

Japan’s fisheries industry has voiced its ardent opposition to the plan, as it will almost certainly cause further damage to the industry’s reputation.

Moreover, some of Japan’s closest neighbours have voiced strong concerns over the plan as well as a number of worried counties from further afield.

Japan’s government had been considering many alternative plans other than its unilateral proposal to just dump radioactive water into the Pacific.

These options included injecting the toxic water deep into the ground, releasing it into the atmosphere after vaporizing it, or making it into a solid state and burying it underground.

Earlier, the operator of Japan’s crippled Fukushima number 1 nuclear power plant had confirmed that four tonnes of coolant had leaked from two storage tanks. The leakage was discovered on January 16 near the ice wall. Damage to the ice pipes in the wall and the company was suspected, according to Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. (TEPCO).

The coolant was used to create an ice wall refraining groundwater from seeping into reactor buildings. Although the company said the leakage has made no impact, it posed more potential danger and challenges in the clean-up of the site, nearly 11 years after the massive earthquake and tsunami disaster on Japan’s northeastern coast. (IANS)

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