Fukushima Still Unstable: Japanese Officials
Hiroko Tabuchi | The New York Times

More than two years after multiple meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear 
power plant, a series of recent mishaps — including a blackout 
set off by a dead rat and the discovery of leaks of thousands of gallons of 
radioactive water — have underscored just how vulnerable the plant 
remains.
ncreasingly, experts are arguing that the plant’s operator, the Tokyo Electric 
Power Company, or Tepco, cannot be trusted to lead what is 
expected to be decades of cleanup and the decommissioning of the plant’s 
reactors without putting the public, and the environment, at risk.
At the same time, the country’s new nuclear regulator remains 
woefully understaffed. It announced Wednesday that it would send a ninth 
official to the site — to monitor the work of about 3,000 laborers.
“The Fukushima Daiichi plant remains in an unstable condition, and 
there is concern that we cannot prevent another accident,” Shunichi 
Tanaka, chairman of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, said at a news 
conference. “We have instructed Tepco to work on reducing some of the 
biggest risks, and we as regulators will step up monitoring.”
The biggest scare at the plant in recent days has been the discovery that 
at least three of seven underground storage pools are seeping thousands 
of gallons of radioactive water into the soil. On Wednesday, Tepco 
acknowledged that the lack of adequate storage space for contaminated 
water had become a “crisis,” and said it would begin emptying the pools. But 
the company said that the leaks will continue over the several 
weeks that it will likely take to transfer the water to other 
containers.
Plant workers dug these underground ponds about six months ago to 
store the ever-growing amount of contaminated water at the plant. There 
is about 400 tons daily from two sources: runoff from a makeshift 
cooling system rigged together after the site’s regular cooling 
equipment was knocked out by the earthquake and tsunami in March 2011, 
and a steady stream of groundwater seeping into damaged reactors.
Tepco stores more than a quarter-million tons of radioactive water at the site 
and says the amount could double within three years.
But as outside experts have discovered with horror, the company had 
lined the pits for the underground pools with only two layers of plastic each 
1.5 millimeters thick, and a third, clay-based layer just 6.5 
millimeters thick. And because the pools require many sheets hemmed 
together, leaks could be springing at the seams, Tepco has said.
“No wonder the water is leaking,” said Hideo Komine, a professor in 
civil engineering at Ibaraki University, just south of Fukushima. He 
said that the outer protective lining should have been hundreds of times 
thicker.
Tepco’s president, Naomi Hirose, traveled to Fukushima on Wednesday 
to apologize for the leaks, which he said had caused further distress to local 
residents. About 160,000 fled their homes in the wake of the 
disaster, and large areas around the plant remain off-limits.
Mr. Hirose said that Tepco would stop using the underground pits, and would 
pump the water out into more aboveground tanks. But Tepco says it is likely to 
take until at least the end of May to empty the pools. Mr. Hirose said that he 
did not think any water would reach the Pacific 
Ocean, because the pools lie at least half a mile inland.
“We’re going to get the water out of these underground pits and into 
tanks as soon as we can,” he said. “We’re aware that this is a crisis 
that we must attend to with urgency.”
But Muneo Morokuzu, a nuclear safety expert at the Tokyo University 
Graduate School of Public Policy, said that the plant required a more 
permanent solution that would reduce the flood of contaminated water 
into the plant in the first place, and that Tepco was simply unable to 
manage the situation. “It’s become obvious that Tepco is not at all 
capable of leading the cleanup,” he said. “It just doesn’t have the 
expertise, and because Fukushima Daiichi is never going to generate 
electricity again, every yen it spends on the decommissioning is thrown 
away.”
“That creates an incentive to cut corners, which is very dangerous,” 
he said. “The government needs to step in, take charge and assemble 
experts and technology from around the world to handle the 
decommissioning instead.”
Tepco, which was essentially nationalized after the disaster, is 
strapped and has made painful cutbacks, forcing subcontractors to slash 
jobs, wages and benefits, according to doctors, lawyers and labor union 
workers who have assisted or represented former plant workers.
The harsh conditions workers face is visible at J-Village, a former 
sports park about 10 miles south of the Daiichi site, where workers don 
protective suits and masks before being bused to the plant. Tired 
workers take naps on flimsy mats in temporary sleeping rooms; 
low-ranking workers are not afforded this luxury, they said, and must 
pass free time roaming the grounds or huddling around vending machines.
Jun Shigemura, a psychiatry specialist at the National Defense 
Medical College who offers pro bono mental care sessions at the 
Fukushima Daiichi plant, said workers there showed signs of 
post-traumatic stress and depression, raising the risk of making errors 
at work, and leaving them vulnerable to substance abuse and even 
suicide.
“Something needs to be done to help these workers,” he said. “For their sake, 
and for the sake of the plant’s safety.”
Some experts say that contaminated water has continued to reach the 
Pacific. Jota Kanda, an oceanographer at the Tokyo University of Marine 
Science and Technology, said last month in a discussion paper posted on 
the Web site of the journal Biogeosciences that Tepco’s own readings of 
radiation levels in waters off the plant suggest a continued leak of 
radioactive cesium into the ocean.
“This suggests that water might be leaking out from the plant through damaged 
pipes or drains or other routes,” he said.
Meanwhile, the plant has been fraught with other scares. Last month, 
pools storing used fuel at the plant went without fresh cooling water 
for two days after a power failure. Engineers later traced the blackout 
to a rat that may have gnawed on power cables, causing an electrical 
short.
Just a week later, workers sent out to plug holes though which 
rodents might enter and gnaw at important equipment inadvertently 
tripped up the power, causing cooling to stop again.

http://www.dianuke.org/fukushima-still-unstable-japanese-officials/


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