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November 19, 2013 – JAPAN – Workers
started removing radioactive fuel rods Monday from a reactor building
at the crippled Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear power plant, Tokyo Electric
Power Co. said. The painstaking and risky task is a crucial first step
toward a full cleanup of the earthquake and tsunami-damaged plant in
northeastern Japan. The Unit 4 reactor was offline at the time of the
March 2011 disaster, and its core didn’t melt as Units 1-3 did. But
hydrogen explosions blew the roof and walls off the Unit 4 building and
weakened the structure, leaving it vulnerable to earthquakes. Tokyo
Electric, known as TEPCO, has since reinforced the building, but experts
say keeping so many fuel rods in a storage pool in the building still
poses a major safety risk. “The operation is an important step toward
decommissioning Fukushima Dai-ichi, which would take 30-40 years,” TEPCO
President Naomi Hirose said in a video message on the company’s
website. TEPCO has built a massive steel structure next to and partly
over Unit 4 to mount cranes for the operation. It will take at least
until the end of 2014 to finish moving the 1,533 sets of fuel rods,
including 202 unused sets, to a safer location. Each set includes about
60-80 fuel rods containing uranium-based fuel pellets.
TEPCO will remove the unused fuel rods
first, and will then move on to the more radioactive spent fuel. At the
very end it will remove three sets of rods that are slightly damaged.
The storage pools in Units 1-4 contain a total of 80 sets of rods with
slight damage, most of which occurred years ago. TEPCO spokesman
Noriyuki Imaizumi said a group of six workers safely stored four sets of
fuel rods in a cask on Monday. No problems were reported. The operation
is delicate. Experts say the fuel rod sets may have been damaged or
jammed by small pieces of debris that fell into the pool during the
explosions. Some have also raised concern about a major earthquake
hitting during the removal work. Two other reactors, Units 5 and 6, were
also offline at the time of the disaster and eventually went into
normal shutdown. They are also expected to be decommissioned. – ABC News
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