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China-Japan-Koreas
Japan To Release Fukushima’s Nuclear Waste Water Into Sea
2020-10-21
[gCaptain] Nearly a decade after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Japan’s government has decided to release over one million tonnes
[equivalent to 264 million gallons]
of contaminated water into the sea, media reports said on Friday, with a formal announcement expected to be made later this month.

The decision is expected to rankle neighboring countries like South Korea, which has already stepped up radiation tests of food from Japan, and further devastate the fishing industry in Fukushima that has battled against such a move for years.

The disposal of contaminated water at the Fukushima Daiichi plant has been a longstanding problem for Japan as it proceeds with an decades-long decommissioning project. Nearly 1.2 million tonnes of contaminated water are currently stored in huge tanks at the facility.

The plant, run by Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc , suffered multiple nuclear meltdowns after a 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

On Friday, Japan’s industry minister Hiroshi Kajiyama said no decision had been made on the disposal of the water yet, but the government aims to make one quickly.

“To prevent any delays in the decommissioning process, we need to make a decision quickly,” he told a news conference.

He did not give any further details, including a time-frame.

The Asahi newspaper reported that any such release is expected to take at around two years to prepare, as the site’s irradiated water first needs to pass through a filtration process before it can be further diluted with seawater and finally released into the ocean.
The solution to pollution is dilution. So who is going to monitor the process and provide the required transparency?
In 2018, Tokyo Electric apologized after admitting its filtration systems had not removed all dangerous material from the water, collected from the cooling pipes used to keep fuel cores from melting when the plant was crippled.

It has said it plans to remove all radioactive particles from the water except tritium, an isotope of hydrogen that is hard to separate and is considered to be relatively harmless.

It is common practice for nuclear plants around the world to release water that contains traces of tritium into the ocean.

In April, a team sent by the International Atomic Energy Agency to review contaminated water issues at the Fukushima site said the options for water disposal outlined by an advisory committee in Japan – vapor release and discharges to the sea – were both technically feasible. The IAEA said both options were used by operating nuclear plants.

Last week, Japanese fish industry representatives urged the government to not allow the release of contaminated water from the Fukushima plant into the sea, saying it would undo years of work to restore their reputation.

South Korea has retained a ban on imports of seafood from the Fukushima region that was imposed after the nuclear disaster and summoned a senior Japanese embassy official last year to explain how Tokyo planned to deal with the Fukushima water problem.

During Tokyo’s bid to host the Olympic Games in 2013, then-prime minister Shinzo Abe told members of the International Olympic Committee that the Fukushima facility was “under control”.
Sez he.
The Games have been delayed to 2021 because of the pandemic and some events are due to be held as close as 60 km (35 miles) from the wrecked plant.
Related:
Fukushima: 2020-01-22 IRGC Commander & ‘Soleimani Ally’ Shot Dead By Masked Assassins On Motorcycle
Fukushima: 2020-01-13 Cameras Show Animals Thriving in Fukushima's 'Uninhabitable' Radioactive Zone
Fukushima: 2019-10-17 Japan allocates millions in aid for typhoon-hit regions
Posted by:Alaska Paul

#2  I would think that if they decide to release the waste water to the sea, that they build a long HDPE pipe outfall to very deep water for proper dilution.
Do it in a couple of years and you would be pumping 16,000 gpm for 2 years through a 40 in pipe at 2 ft/second
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2020-10-21 12:33  

#1  It has said it plans to remove all radioactive particles from the water except tritium, an isotope of hydrogen that is hard to separate and is considered to be relatively harmless.
They are going to have to do something with the water before it leaks out to the sea, possibly in another earthquake. The Japanese fishing industry isn't happy about this either and will be watching the government closely.
Posted by: magpie   2020-10-21 10:29  

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