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News / Nation & World

Japan nuclear plant leaks 300 tons of highly radioactive water

The Columbian
Published: August 19, 2013, 5:00pm

BEIJING — The operator of the tsunami-damaged nuclear plant at Fukushima, Japan, says that 300 tons of highly radioactive water has leaked from one of its storage tanks, the worst of a number of similar leaks since the catastrophic 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Tokyo Electric Power Co., said that the leak, discovered Monday morning at the Fukushima Daichi nuclear power plant, posed no immediate threat to Pacific Ocean waters. The accident was classified by Japan’s nuclear regulator as a Level 1 incident — the second lowest on the scale of nuclear accidents, as classified by the International Atomic Energy Authority.

Still, it was a serious setback in the efforts to contain and clean up the damage that crippled the power plant in March 2011, the world’s worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

About 1,000 tanks have been built on the ground around the power plant complex to contain radioactive water that had been used to cool its damaged nuclear reactors. Three nuclear reactors melted down after the tsunami knocked out cooling systems.

On at least four previous occasions since the initial disaster, workers have discovered leaks in the tanks, though none was as serious as the leak reported Tuesday.

“We are extremely concerned,” Hideka Morimoto, a spokesman for the Nuclear Regulation Authority, was quoted telling reporters Tuesday in Tokyo.

A spokesman for Tokyo Electric said that workers had put concrete barriers and sandbags around the damaged tank to contain radioactive water.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a political conservative who won election last year in part on a promise to support the nuclear power industry, has promised to help Tokyo Electric clean up the contamination.

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