Cesium levels in Fukushima water 8 times higher than after disaster 福島原発―地下汚染水のセシウム濃度、事故後より8倍に!
By SHUNSUKE
KIMURA/ Staff Writer
Tokyo
Electric Power Co. has reported finding radioactive cesium levels in
underground water at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant
that is eight times greater than what it recorded right after the
accident.
TEPCO,
which operates the facility, said Aug. 15 that it detected 11,600
becquerels of radioactive cesium per liter of contaminated water in a
tunnel near the No. 1 reactor building on the side facing the ocean.
That
compares with 1,490 becquerels per liter it recorded at the site
shortly after the accident in March 2011.
TEPCO said
it believes the readings have soared due to rainwater containing
cesium flowing into the tunnel. But the amount detected is roughly
one-100,000th of that found in radioactive water in a tunnel near the
No. 2 reactor building.
The utility
said cesium levels are lower in the tunnel near the No. 1 reactor
building because sea water from tsunami had already flooded it. In
contrast, water in the underground tunnels near the No. 2 and No. 3
reactor buildings was exceedingly more radioactive as highly
contaminated water from their turbine buildings filled the tunnels.
In the
meantime, TEPCO said it began vacuum pumping contaminated water from
the damaged facility on Aug. 15 by inserting steel pipes underground
in the revetment near the No. 1 and No. 2 rector buildings.
The company
plans to install 28 of the pipes in total in a bid to pump up to 70
tons of contaminated water a day. The aim is to reduce the flow of
contaminated underground water into the ocean, which the government
estimated at 300 tons per day.
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