Tokyo (CNN) -- Japanese officials unveiled a decades-long plan Wednesday to 
decommission the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, where reactor 
cooling systems failed after the country's devastating earthquake and tsunami 
in March.

The Japanese government and Tokyo Electric Power Co. said the work schedule 
would proceed over three or four decades to scrap the four crippled reactors at 
the site.

There are three phases, according to the plan.

It will begin with the removal of nuclear fuel in spent fuel pools within two 
years. That task is scheduled to be completed within 10 years. The plan also 
calls for commencing the removal of fuel debris within 10 years with the goal 
of completing that work in 20 to 25 years.

The reactors will be completely decommissioned in 30 to 40 years, according to 
the plan.

The plume of radioactive particles that spewed from Fukushima Daiichi displaced 
about 80,000 people who live within a 20-kilometers (12.5 mile) radius of the 
plant, as well as residents of one village as far as 40 kilometers to the 
northwest.

The earthquake and tsunami killed more than 15,000 people in northeastern Japan.

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Sander C. Perle
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