Strong winds halt dismantling of Fukushima nuclear plant’s water tanks

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The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant went into meltdown after it was hit by a catastrophic tsunami in 2011.

The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant went into meltdown after it was hit by a catastrophic tsunami in 2011.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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FUKUSHIMA - Gusty winds prevented the operator of Japan’s crippled Fukushima nuclear plant from starting to dismantle treated water tanks on Feb 13, a crucial step towards decommissioning the entire facility.

The “water tank dismantling has been postponed because of strong winds”, Mr Tatsuya Matoba, a spokesman for Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), told AFP.

“The process could start from tomorrow depending on weather conditions,” he added.

The step was seen as a milestone in Tepco’s decades-long project to decommission the stricken plant in northern Japan, which went into meltdown after it was hit by a catastrophic tsunami in 2011.

Officials were to have started the process on Feb 13 to get rid of some of the tanks to clear the space needed to store nuclear debris to be extracted from the plant’s reactors.

Tepco has stored around 1.2 million tonnes of water – a combination of groundwater, seawater and rainwater – at the site, along with water used for cooling the reactors, since the 2011 accident.

The water is filtered to remove various radioactive materials but has remained inside more than 1,000 tanks that occupy much of the plant.

Scrapping the water tanks became possible after Tepco began releasing the stored water from the plant into the Pacific Ocean in August 2023.

After removing the tanks, the utility plans to build facilities to store highly dangerous molten fuel debris to be extracted from inside the reactors. AFP

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