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Japan prepares for release of tritium from Fukushima plant
April 2016 – TOKYO — To
dump or not to dump a little-discussed substance is the question
brewing in Japan as it grapples with the aftermath of the nuclear
catastrophe in Fukushima five years ago. The substance is tritium. The
radioactive material is nearly impossible to remove from the huge
quantities of water used to cool melted-down reactors at the Fukushima
Dai-ichi plant, which was wrecked by the massive tsunami in northeastern
Japan in March 2011. The water is still accumulating since 300 tons are
needed every day to keep the reactors chilled. Some is leaking into the
ocean. Huge tanks lined up around the plant, at last count 1,000 of
them, each hold hundreds of tons of water that have been cleansed of
radioactive cesium and strontium but not of tritium.
Ridding water of tritium has been
carried out in laboratories. But it’s an effort that would be extremely
costly at the scale required for the Fukushima plant, which sits on the
Pacific coast. Many scientists argue it isn’t worth it and say the risks
of dumping the tritium-laced water into the sea are minimal. Their
calls to simply release the water into the Pacific Ocean are alarming
many in Japan and elsewhere. Rosa Yang, a nuclear expert at the Electric
Power Research Institute, based in Palo Alto, California, who advises
Japan on decommissioning reactors, believes the public angst is uncalled
for. She says a Japanese government official should simply get up in
public and drink water from one of the tanks to convince people it’s
safe.
But the line between safe and unsafe
radiation is murky, and children are more susceptible to
radiation-linked illness. Tritium goes directly into soft tissues and
organs of the human body, potentially increasing the risks of cancer and
other sicknesses. “Any exposure to tritium radiation could pose some
health risk. This risk increases with prolonged exposure, and health
risks include increased occurrence of cancer,” said Robert Daguillard, a
spokesman for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The agency is
trying to minimize the tritium from U.S. nuclear facilities that escapes
into drinking water.
Right after the March 2011 disaster,
many in Japan panicked, some even moving overseas although they lived
hundreds of miles (kilometers) away from the Fukushima no-go zone. By
now, concern has settled to the extent that some worry the lessons from
the disaster are being forgotten. Tritium may be the least of Japan’s
worries. Much hazardous work remains to keep the plant stabilized, and
new technology is needed for decommissioning the plant’s reactors and
containing massive radioactive contamination. The ranks of Japan’s
anti-nuclear activists have been growing since the March 2011 accident,
and many oppose releasing water with tritium into the sea. They argue
that even if tritium’s radiation is weaker than strontium or cesium, it
should be removed, and that good methods should be devised to do that.
Japan’s fisheries organization has
repeatedly expressed concerns over the issue. News of a release of the
water could devastate local fisheries just as communities in
northeastern Japan struggle to recover from the 2011 disasters. An
isotope of hydrogen, or radioactive hydrogen, tritium exists in water
form, and so like water can evaporate, although it is not known how much
tritium escaped into the atmosphere from Fukushima as gas from
explosions. The amount of tritium in the contaminated water stored at
Fukushima Dai-ichi is estimated at 3.4 peta becquerels, or 34 with a
mind-boggling 14 zeros after it.
But theoretically collected in one
place, it would amount to just 57 milliliters, or about the amount of
liquid in a couple of espresso cups – a minuscule quantity in the
overall masses of water. To illustrate that point, Shunichi Tanaka,
chairman of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, showed reporters a small
bottle half-filled with blue water that was the equivalent of 57
milliliters. Public distrust is running so high after the Fukushima
accident that Tokyo Electric Power Co, or TEPCO, the utility that
operates the Fukushima plant and oversees its decommissioning, has
mostly kept quiet about the tritium, pending a political decision on
releasing the water.
Privately, they say it will have to be
released, but they can’t say that outright. What will be released from
Fukushima will be well below the global standard allowed for tritium in
the water, say Tanaka and others favoring its release, which is likely
to come gradually later this year, not all at once. –Japan Today
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