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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Fukushima nuclear clean-up costs rise as steam seen again
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 24, 2013


Cooling device outage at Fukushima: Japanese operator
Tokyo (AFP) July 25, 2013 - The cooling system for an undamaged reactor at the Fukushima nuclear power plant temporarily stopped working Thursday, the plant's operator said, as mysterious steam continued to rise from a broken unit.

While the outage only last two hours and there was no danger of a runaway nuclear reaction, the incident further underlined the precarious state of the plant more than two years after it was hit by a tsunami.

Four of the six reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi plant were battered by the waves of March 2011, with their cooling systems knocked offline, sending three of them into meltdown.

Reactors 5 and 6 were not affected, although both still had fuel inside at the time of the disaster.

On Thursday morning machinery keeping Reactor 6 cool stopped as workers tested a back-up diesel generator, said operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO).

Meanwhile, steam that began appearing last week near the badly-wrecked Reactor 3 was still in evidence, the company said, admitting it was still no closer to identifying the reason for the vapour.

"Workers could still see the steam rising from the area as of 1:00 pm (0400 GMT)," a TEPCO spokesman told AFP.

The company's best guess so far is that accumulated rainwater was being heated in some way. But, said the spokesman: "We still don't know for sure what the cause is."

Thursday's incidents come after a week of bad news for TEPCO.

The utility was admonished by government officials on Tuesday for a delay in admitting that radiation-polluted groundwater was flowing into the sea.

It had reported rising levels of possibly cancer-causing materials in groundwater samples from underneath the plant, but maintained that toxic water was likely contained.

On Monday it admitted that its own study, completed days earlier, revealed the groundwater was leaking into the ocean, prompting criticism over the delay.

And on Thursday representatives of fishermen nationwide met senior company officials to express their anger at radioactive leaks into the sea.

The clean-up after the Fukushima nuclear disaster could cost five times more than estimated, figures have revealed, as Tokyo Electric Power said on Wednesday that steam had been seen again in a reactor building.

It is the third time steam has been observed in the battered structure over the last week.

The government-backed National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology said decontamination work in Fukushima prefecture will cost up to 5.81 trillion yen ($58 billion), far more than the 1 trillion yen the government has so far allocated.

The institute, in a report released Tuesday, said the costs -- including for transportation and storage of radiation-contaminated soil over a large area -- would be in a range between 3.13 trillion yen and 5.81 trillion yen.

"We hope the study will be helpful in drafting plans for decontamination of forests and farmland, as well as plans for residents to return to their homes," the institute said.

The study calculated costs for several decontamination models, including one under which surface soil on farmland is removed and stored elsewhere, and another that would only see that soil turned over.

"It's important to examine the effects of several decontamination scenarios" as the ratio of evacuees who plan to return depends on the level of radiation after decontamination work, it said.

As the report was released, government officials scolded TEPCO on Tuesday for a delay in admitting that radiation-polluted groundwater was flowing into the sea.

Earlier this month, the utility had reported spiking levels of possibly cancer-causing materials in soil from underneath the plant, but maintained that toxic groundwater was likely contained.

On Monday it admitted its own study, completed days earlier, revealed the groundwater was leaking into the ocean, prompting criticism over the delay.

Trade minister Toshimitsu Motegi told reporters Tuesday the slow release of data by TEPCO was "extremely deplorable", while Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said: "This kind of data should be disclosed quickly".

On Wednesday, TEPCO said workers had noticed steam around the fifth floor of the building housing Reactor No. 3, which was wrecked by the tsunami of March 2011. It was the second time in two days and the third time in a week that steam had been observed.

The firm has said there has been no increase in the amount of radioactive material being released, although it does not know where the steam is coming from.

TEPCO said it was looking at the possibility that accumulated rainwater had been the source.

The roof of the building was blown off in a hydrogen explosion after meltdowns in the days after the tsunami swept ashore.

Although the natural catastrophe is known to have killed more than 18,000 people, no one is officially recorded as having died as a direct result of the radiation released at Fukushima.

kh/hg/st

TEPCO

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