Watchdog says Japan nuclear leak could mean new crisis

Company says 300 tonnes of tainted water escaped tank at Fukushima plant

A worker near tanks filled with radioactive water earlier this year at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Fukushima, Japan. Photograph: Noboru Hashimto/New York Times
A worker near tanks filled with radioactive water earlier this year at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Fukushima, Japan. Photograph: Noboru Hashimto/New York Times

A leak of highly radioactive water at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant could be the beginning of a new crisis at the crippled facility, Japan's nuclear watchdog has said.

The plant operator has built hundreds of steel tanks to store massive amounts of radioactive water coming from three melted reactors, as well as underground water running into reactor and turbine basements.

Tokyo Electric Power Co says about 300 tonnes of contaminated water leaked from one of the tanks, possibly through a seam.

The leak is the fifth, and the worst, since last year, involving tanks of the same design at the wrecked Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, raising concerns that contaminated water could begin leaking from storage tanks one after another.

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"That's what we fear the most. We must remain alert. We should assume that what has happened once could happen again, and prepare for more," Nuclear Regulation Authority chairman Shunichi Tanaka said.

“We are in a situation where there is no time to waste.”

The watchdog also proposed at a weekly meeting yesterday to raise the rating of the seriousness of the leak to level 3, a “serious incident”, from level 1, “an anomaly”, on an International Nuclear and Radiological event scale from 0 to 7.

The watchdog urged Tepco to step up monitoring for leaks and take precautionary measures.

During the meeting, officials also revealed plant workers had apparently overlooked several signs of leaks, suggesting their twice-daily patrols were largely just a walk.

They had not monitored water levels inside tanks, obviously missed a puddle forming at the bottom of the leaking tank earlier, and kept open a valve on an anti-leakage barrier around the tanks.

Tepco said the leaked water is believed to have mostly seeped into the ground after escaping from the barrier around the tank.

It initially said the leak did not pose an immediate threat to the sea because of its distance - about 1,650ft - from the coastline.

But Tepco reversed that view late yesterday and acknowledged a possible leak to the sea after detecting high radioactivity inside a gutter extending to the ocean.

The company said the tank may have been leaking slowly for weeks through a possible flaw in its bottom. That could create extensive soil contamination and a blow to plans to release untainted underground water into the sea as part of efforts to reduce the amount of radioactive water.

The leaks have shaken confidence in the reliability of hundreds of tanks that are crucial for storing water that has been pumped into the broken reactors to keep melted radioactive fuel cool.

The plant suffered multiple meltdowns following a massive earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 - a level 7 “major accident” and the worst since Chernobyl in 1986.

AP