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NUKEWARS
Fukushima water leak risk exaggerated: Japan watchdog
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 05, 2013


Fukushima tank leak may have mixed with groundwater: TEPCO
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 05, 2013 - Highly radioactive water leaking from a storage tank at Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant may have seeped into groundwater flowing towards the Pacific Ocean, the plant's operator said Thursday.

It is the first time that Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) has revealed that leaks from the tank -- situated behind the plant reactor -- could also be polluting the groundwater beneath the plant. TEPCO has previously admitted that radiation has seeped from the plant's reactors into the groundwater and out to sea.

About 300 tonnes of irradiated water leaked from one of around 1,000 storage tanks last month.

TEPCO said Thursday that workers had detected radiation of 650 becquerels per litre in samples from a monitoring well dug near the damaged tank.

"There is the possibility that the contaminated water (from the tank), diluted by rainwater and others, has seeped into soil and reached groundwater," TEPCO said in a press release.

The groundwater from the surrounding hillsides naturally flows beneath the plant and out to sea.

As it seeps through the soil it mixes with polluted fluid that has seeped into the ground under the reactors.

The government said on Tuesday it would spend $470 million on a scheme to freeze the soil around the stricken reactors to form an impenetrable wall of ice they hope will direct groundwater away from the plant.

Thousands of tonnes of radioactive water are being stored in the temporary tanks at Fukushima. Much of it has been used to cool molten reactors at the plant wrecked by the earthquake and tsunami of March 2011.

The discovery of leaks from some of these tanks or from pipes feeding them, as well as radiation hotspots on the ground even where no water is evident, has created a growing sense of crisis.

In a minor incident, the arm of a 600-tonne crane being used to remove debris at the plant was found bent down, TEPCO said in another press release.

Plant workers confirmed that damage had been done to a part where the crane's arm was connected to its main mast, the statement said.

The chief of Japan's nuclear watchdog chided the operator of the Fukushima plant Thursday for its inability properly to explain problems, which he said was inflating fears around the world.

Shunichi Tanaka, chairman of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, said information given by Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) on the level of radioactive contamination was "scientifically unacceptable".

He also lashed out at media coverage of a series of water leaks, saying reports were giving a misleading impression of the seriousness of the situation at the stricken plant.

Fukushima has leapt into the international spotlight as a series of setbacks have coincided with the final stages of Tokyo's bid to host the 2020 Olympic Games, where it faces off against Istanbul and Madrid this weekend.

Tanaka's comments come after TEPCO announced it had detected a hotspot with a reading of 2,200 millisieverts per hour.

"What TEPCO is talking about is the level of contamination," said Tanaka. "Describing it with the unit 'millisieverts per hour' is scientifically unacceptable.

"It's like describing how much something weighs by using centimetres," he said, adding the unit "becquerel" was more appropriate.

TEPCO has confirmed that a reading of 2,200 millisieverts per hour would be enough to kill a person in a matter of hours.

But experts point out that this reading is taken very close to the source of the radiation. It drops dramatically -- to 40 millisieverts per hour -- just 50 centimetres (20 inches) away.

And the kind of radiation being emitted is very low energy, which means it is not able to penetrate the body easily.

That means while the dose could be fatal to a naked person immersed in the toxic liquid, it would do little to a worker wearing even rudimentary protection at a normal distance.

Tanaka said the media covering Fukushima needed to pay attention to the impact of what they reported.

"You should avoid the situation that Japan gets criticism from abroad because of misleading information," he told reporters.

He said fears of an environmental catastrophe from leaks of radioactive water were overblown.

"From what we can see from existing data... so far there is no meaningful effect" on the Pacific.

Thousands of tonnes of radioactive water are being stored in temporary tanks at Fukushima, 220 kilometres (135 miles) north of the Japanese capital. Much of it was used to cool molten reactors wrecked by the tsunami of March 2011.

The discovery of leaks from some of these tanks or from pipes feeding them, as well as radiation hotspots on the ground even where no water is evident, has created a growing sense of crisis in the public mind.

Independent scientists generally agree with Tanaka on the importance of distinguishing between the level of contamination in radioactive hot spots and their impact on the surrounding environment.

"The radiation leaks at the Fukushima site are very worrying... but so far the releases to the Pacific Ocean have been much smaller than those seen during the accident," said Jim Smith, Professor of Environmental Science at Britain's University of Portsmouth.

"I think significant damage to marine life is unlikely, except perhaps in a very localised area around the plant," he said.

Paddy Regan, Professor of Nuclear Physics at the University of Surrey, said the toxic water contains "beta" radiation that is weaker than "gamma" radiation.

"Workers can get close to the source of beta radiation without a significant radiological hazard," Regan said.

Tanaka said TEPCO did not have the expertise in radiation monitoring that they needed for the current situation, and admitted that as specialists, his watchdog would have to help.

"Perhaps we have to take them by the hand and teach them step-by-step," he said.

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