Japan’s Nuclear Water Woes

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Almost four years ago, we switched our focus on this website from international security to the unknown issues at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plants – the potential consequences of a larger accident there were impossible to ignore. We covered the meltdowns themselves, the unimagined consequences of an accident with the cooling pool of Reactor No. 4, the ice walls, and the potential for radiation to harm humans, wildlife, and the environment itself.

Perhaps most important, we linked together physicists, biologists, decision makers, nuclear experts (and more nuclear experts), physicians, journalistsUN officials, spiritual leaders, teachers and students to build a more comprehensive understanding of nuclear power’s relationship with people and the environment that surrounds it. We are often restricted, in engineering and science as well as business and politics, to narrow, vertical styles of thinking. Our mission is to connect professions — and individuals at their top – horizontally. The debate over the effects of March 11, 2011, will continue on for decades, and probably remain unresolved. We hope we were able to broaden the conversation.  From this point on, Finding the Missing Link will turn its focus back to issues of security, religion, and politics across the world, building on what we learned through our work on Fukushima, and hoping to build connections otherwise unmade.

Earlier this month Gordon Edwards sent us the following Associated Press article, which descriBes in detail where the clean up of the nuclear power plants stands now and what issues TEPCO and Japan will face going forward.

–Akio Matsumura & Chris Cote

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Akira Ono, plant chief for the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant of Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), speaks to the media at the main earthquake-proof building at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture, northeastern Japan, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014. “The contaminated water is a most pressing issue that we must tackle. There is no doubt about that,” said Ono, head of the plant, where three of its six reactors melted down following the March, 2011 earthquake and tsunami. “Our effort to mitigate the problem is at its peak now. Though I cannot say exactly when, I hope things start getting better when the measures start taking effect.” (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, Pool)

 

Japan’s nuclear cleanup stymied by water woes

By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press, November 12, 2014

OKUMA, Japan (AP) — More than three years into the massive cleanup of Japan’s tsunami-damaged nuclear power plant, only a tiny fraction of the workers are focused on key tasks such as preparing for the dismantling of the broken reactors and removing radioactive fuel rods.

Instead, nearly all the workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant are devoted to an enormously distracting problem: a still-growing amount of contaminated water used to keep the damaged reactors from overheating. The amount has been swelled further by groundwater entering the reactor buildings.

Hundreds of huge blue and gray tanks to store the radioactive water, and buildings holding water treatment equipment, are rapidly taking over the plant [site], where the cores of three reactors melted following a 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Workers were building more tanks during a visit to the complex Wednesday by foreign media, including The Associated Press.

“The contaminated water is a most pressing issue that we must tackle. There is no doubt about that,” said Akira Ono, head of the plant. “Our effort to mitigate the problem is at its peak now. Though I cannot say exactly when, I hope things start getting better when the measures start taking effect.”

The numbers tell the story.

6,000 WORKERS

Every day, about 6,000 workers pass through the guarded gate of the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant on the Pacific coast — two to three times more than when it was actually producing electricity.

On a recent work day, about 100 workers were dismantling a makeshift roof over one of the reactor buildings, and about a dozen others were removing fuel rods from a cooling pool. Most of the rest [about 5,880 workers] were dealing with the contaminated water, said Tatsuhiro Yamagishi, a spokesman for Tokyo Electric Power Co., or TEPCO, the utility that owns the plant.

The work threatens to exhaust the supply of workers for other tasks, since employees must stop working when they reach annual radiation exposure limits. Experts say it is crucial to reduce the amount and radioactivity of the contaminated water to decrease the risk of exposure to workers and the environmental impact before the decommissioning work gets closer to the highly contaminated core areas.

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40 YEARS

The plant has six reactors, three of which were offline when disaster struck on March 11, 2011. A magnitude-9.0 earthquake triggered a huge tsunami which swept into the plant and knocked out its backup power and cooling systems, leading to meltdowns at the three active reactors.

Decommissioning and dismantling all six reactors is a delicate, time-consuming process that includes removing the melted fuel from a highly radioactive environment, as well as all the extra [irradiated] fuel rods, which sit in cooling pools at the top of the reactor buildings. Workers must determine the exact condition of the melted fuel debris and develop remote-controlled and radiation-resistant robotics to deal with it.

Troubles and delays in preparatory stages, including the water problem and additional measures needed to address environmental and health concerns in removing highly radioactive debris from atop reactor buildings that exploded during meltdowns, have pushed back schedules on the decommissioning roadmap. Recently, officials said the government and TEPCO plan to delay the planned start of fuel removal from Units 1 and 2 by about 5 years.

The process of decommissioning the four reactors is expected to take at least 40 years.

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500,000 TONS

The flow of underground water is doubling the amount of contaminated water and spreading it to vast areas of the compound.

Exposure to the radioactive fuel contaminates the water used to cool the melted fuel from inside, and much of it leaks and pours into the basements of the reactors and turbines, and into maintenance trenches that extend to the Pacific Ocean. Plans to freeze some of the most toxic water inside the trench near the reactors have been delayed for at least 8 months due to technical challenges.

The plant reuses some of the contaminated water for cooling after partially treating it, but the additional groundwater creates a huge excess that must be pumped out.

Currently, more than 500,000 tons of radioactive water is being stored in nearly 1,000 large tanks which now cover large areas of the sprawling plant. After a series of leaks last year, the tanks [that are merely bolted together] are being replaced with costlier welded ones.

That amount dwarfs the 9,000 tons of contaminated water produced during the 1979 partial meltdown of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in the United States. At Three Mile Island, it took 14 years for the water to evaporate, said Lake Barrett, a retired U.S. nuclear regulatory official who was part of the early mitigation team there and has visited the Fukushima plant.

“This is a much more complex, much more difficult water management problem,” Barrett said.

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10 TRILLION YEN

An estimated 2 trillion yen ($18 billion) will be needed just for decontamination and other mitigation of the water problem. Altogether, the entire decommissioning process, including compensation for area residents, reportedly will cost about 10 trillion yen, or about $90 billion. [at least]

All this for a plant that will never produce a kilowatt of energy again.

About 500 workers are digging deep holes in preparation for a taxpayer-funded 32 billion yen ($290 million) underground “frozen wall” around four reactors and their turbine buildings to try to keep the contaminated water from seeping out.

TEPCO is developing systems to try to remove most radioactive elements from the water. One, known as ALPS, has been trouble-plagued, but utility officials hope to achieve its daily capacity of 2,000 tons when they enter full operation next month following a final inspection by regulators.

Officials hope to treat all contaminated water by the end of March, but that is far from certain.

13 Replies to “Japan’s Nuclear Water Woes”

  1. AFTER SEVENTY YEARS
    And speaking Japanese she said,
    “It is what has been done to the world.”
    She had fallen back onto the threshold of disillusion
    With the atomic radiation to take form in her spirit.
    To give her last energy to her question,
    She did so because he also knew the radiation
    One final searching she bore in her poet’s wound.
    Joe hears a fan motor and a bicycle wheel ticking
    .
    Joe McGrath said to her, “I can see the children of August
    The men and woman forming images In the back of my brain.
    She kept looking at him whispering, “Okuma now.”
    She was no longer a complete Japanese woman
    Only a poet searching for the last line or the first,
    Her tongue a plectrum sound like tones of samisen
    “Itte kudassai … “What I mean to say is tell me
    What you think of it all, do you have an answer?

    What is it that has brought you here?”
    He felt deeply into his connection to her question
    And deeply into his heart, which had begun trembling
    When her eyes remained fixed for so long on his.
    I need a breath,” he thought. “My voice is summoned.”
    And took in her country’s air to speak with,
    “Speaking from my soul,” he said,
    “The smallest hands I feel”

    And he couldn’t go on.
    His eyes closed to bring him to the scene,
    “Hands with fingertips as small as drops of rain,
    Thousands of them touch my mind reaching out
    From the bombings and I am hovering
    Over Nagasaki and Hiroshima swinging a magnet
    On the arm of a mechanical crane, swinging senselessly
    Over the steel shell of the bomb, failing to clutch back

    What mass has been dropped into morning’s midair.
    “The fingertips of children are touching my forehead
    As I bend to them. Little soft fingertips pressing until
    They are not soft, until they are bones touching me
    In supplication, in Japanese they are silent because
    They are too polite to kill me with their voices.”
    She said nothing, then,” The gentle touch of creation”
    And new landscapes our atomic dust, our footprints.”

    And as if she had found her mark, she stood
    ‘But know that I will write a poem about you
    To keep your spirit in Japan and your interior life’.
    She took her finger and as if writing Hiragana
    Forms of words on the wall beside her appeared
    “It will draw upon our atomic dust. I will title
    The work about God and call it, The Visitor.”
    Joe hears a fan motor and a bicycle wheel ticking

    By John A. McCabe ©

    Taken in abstracted form from my novel The Sanctity of Remembering now in a final edit by The Writer’s Guild of PSBI.

  2. Dear Akio!

    thanks for the message and for the useful information. I agree with your vision.

    In the end of July 2014 I visited Fukushima Prefecture and participated in the annual conference of the Association of Japanese Scientists. So I know about the situation around Fukushima NPP. It is terrible!
    I made presentation on the conference about Russian ambitions to construct new NPPs in Japan too. Additionally I presented Japanese version of the video-documentary Wasteland. It is about the situation around MAYAK reprocessing facility in Ural region, 60 years later of the nuclear accident in 1957. So secret Kystym accident was Soviet “state secret”, so it was the way for Chernobyl and Fukushima. I agree with your strategy to inform more about the situation around Fukushima.

    All the best.

    Oleg Bodrov

  3. Dear Mr. Matsumura,

    Thank you very much for your kind communication.
    You have contributed greatly to awakening the world to the real
    and present dangers of Fukuichi.
    Fukuichi has taught the world that the real global security issue is
    the presence of more than 440 nuclear reactors in the world. They are all
    no less dangerous than nuclear bombs.
    The mainstream of the world continues to promote them,
    ignoring the lessons of Fukushima.
    Its macabre implications are obvious and inevitable.
    Earthquakes,volcanic eruptions,cyclones,floodings are on the increase worldwide.
    The world is becoming unstable.

    I am now warning that the fate of the world is in the hands of electric companies.
    I predicted ten years ago that the fate of Japan will be decided by electric copmpanies.
    So it has happened.
    Fukushima is being forgotten.Tokyo Olympic Games is being utilized for it.
    They could not conceal the link much longer.
    The influential IPPNW has started calling upon the IOC to cancell it,as I have reported to you.

    In my speech at Waseda University made last month,I pointed out
    “We need to bear in mind that the lack of ethics and responsibility is inherent
    to the use of nuclear energy. This is shown by the problem of the disposal of nuclear waste.
    The deeply-rooted cause of the crisis confronting mankind is the universally prevalent lack of ethics.”

    The will of heavens and the earth, or the law of history, puts an end to all dictatorships.
    This is why I remain hopeful for the future.

    I wish you success in your renewed efforts.

    Let us stay in contact.

    Yours truly,
    Mitsuhei Murata

  4. Dear Akio,

    You have done a monumental dedication to creating awareness regarding the dangers of nuclear energy. Sometimes we do not know the extent of our influence until long after we are gone. You have been courageous with your efforts and also carried yourself with the utmost integrity.

    The tragedy of Fukushima touches all things on this planet, everything upon the planet will register with its effects–it is recorded in the ice in Antarctica, in the soil, on every growing leaf, and in our very own cellular structure.

    Thank you, Akio. I am glad I have met you and hope one day we will meet again.

    Oshee

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