Friday, August 2, 2013

Fukushima Updates - August 2 , 2013 .....groundwater contamination of Tritium finally revealed - 20 - 40 Trillion Bq since May of 2011 .....Strontium data to be revealed soon....Tepco incompetence will soon have Japan swimming in contaminated groundwater and polluted Ocean water .... As a Deputy Prime Minister talks about learning from the Nazis , how badly does Japan want old folks to die ? .

Fubarshima updates.....


FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 2013

#Fukushima I Nuke Plant Groundwater Contamination: 20 to 40 Trillion Bq of Tritium May Have Been Released Since May 2011


But even that would still be within the annual regulatory target (22 trillion becquerels of tritium) for Fukushima I Nuclear Power plant.

The information about the amount of tritium released since the accident came from TEPCO during the August 2 meeting of the NRA working group to deal with contaminated water at Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant.

So far, reports of radioactive materials in water have been focused mostly on I-131 (no longer detected) and radioactive cesium. TEPCO does measure other nuclides including tritium and strontium in seawater and fish, but the total estimates haven't been presented, until yesterday for tritium (August 2, 2013).

First, the news from Kyodo (8/2/2013):
トリチウム数十兆ベクレル流出か 福島第1原発の汚染水
Dozens of trillions of becquerels of tritium may have leaked from Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant

福島第1原発の汚染水が海に流出している問題で、東京電力は2日、2011年5月以降に汚染水に含まれて流出した放射性物質のトリチウムの量が20兆~40兆ベクレルに上るとの試算を明らかにした。原子力規制委員会で開かれた汚染水対策を検討する作業部会に報告した。

Regarding the problem of contaminated water leaking into the ocean from Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant, TEPCO disclosed the estimate on August 2 showing the amount of tritium in the contaminated water that leaked since May 2011 to be between 20 to 40 trillion becquerels. The estimate was reported during the meeting of the working group set up within Nuclear Regulatory Authority to deal with the contaminated water [at Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant].

東電は、体内に蓄積しやすく健康影響が懸念される放射性ストロンチウムも流出総量を今後試算するとともに、原発周辺海域での魚介類への影響調査を始める。

TEPCO will also estimate the total amount of radioactive strontium that has leaked from the plant, as strontium is easily accumulated in body and may affect health. The company will start the survey of fish and shellfish in the ocean near the plant.

The very last sentence in Kyodo News is not true. The survey has been ongoing. TEPCO has admitted so far only to the leak into the open culvert in front of the water intake canals, and not into the water in the plant harbor.

Before we collectively freak out on the huge number like 40 trillion becquerels, let's take a look at what it was before the accident for Fukushima I Nuke Plant and what it probably continues to be at all the other nuclear power plants in Japan when it comes to releasing tritium.

Here's a page (page 38) from the 2011 report by Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) under the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry regarding the nuclear waste management at Japan's nuclear power plants, showing the amount of tritium released yearly by nuclear power plants (English labels added by me; click to enlarge):

Before the accident, Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant was releasing tritium in the order of trillion becquerels per year. In 2009, the amount was 2.0E+12 becquerels, or 2 trillion becquerels of tritium.

Nuclear power plants with pressured-water reactors release more tritium (the numbers in 2011 circled in blue in the table). Hokkaido's Tomari Nuclear Power Plant, for example, released 3.8E+13 becquerels, or 38 trillion becquerels of tritiumin 2011.

The total amount of tritium released from Japan's commercial nuclear power plants in 2011 was, according to the table, 3.1E+14 becquerels, or 310 trillion becquerels. The order of magnitude is the same in all years in the table, at 100s of trillions becquerels per year.

The pre-accident target set for Fukushima I Nuke Plant for tritium release per year was 2.2E+13, or 22 trillion becquerels, according to TEPCO's document on tritium released on February 28, 2013. (Here's the results of 2006, showing ND for all nuclides tested except for tritium.)

So, according to TEPCO's estimate, release of tritium after the accident in 40 trillion becquerels, or 20 trillion becquerels per year, would be still within the company's pre-accident annual target, and about the same as amounts released by nuclear power plants with pressured-water reactors.

The density of tritium in waste water that can be released is 60,000 Bq/Liter, according to the law and regulations governing the operating nuclear power plants.

What's more worrisome is strontium, which many suspect has exceeded the target.

(H/T Kontan-Bigcat for NISA/METI document, TEPCO's document)


http://fukushima-diary.com/2013/08/column-tepco-may-be-gaining-time-before-press-question-of-the-direct-leakage-of-the-coolant-water-to-the-sea/


[Column] Tepco may be gaining time before press question % of the direct leakage of the coolant water to the sea

Everything started this Spring.
Suddenly Tepco got panicking and tested around everywhere in the plant area.
All the results showed high level of radiation. It showed the possibility of sea contamination, but for some reason, they kept denying it.
2 weeks ago, they finally admitted and decided to build the wall on the coastal line.

Now the groundwater level is coming up due to the thoughtless construction of the wall. Nobody knows where the water stops. Tepco says it must stop at “some point”, but it seems like over the ground level.

It has been obvious that the contamination is spreading over the sea since March of 2011. and Tepco was always denying the possibility.

Why did they start testing around ?
Why did they have to build the wall even before they take prevention against the overflow of groundwater ?

They don’t make sense. We are full of questions.

The wall, which Tepco is building in a hurry, has 2m space above. Contaminated groundwater can easily go through the space.
It suggests Tepco didn’t think the groundwater level can come up that high.
It means, groundwater level is already out of their control.

About the groundwater contamination, in the beginning Tepco was saying probably it’s from the past leakage.
Now they are saying it might be from the underground tunnel to accumulate water.

The point is.. What are they hiding ?

The worst scenario is the coolant water of the reactors are directly leaking to underground to cause sea contamination. (Not positively discharging, but passively leaking, so they can’t stop it.)

It looks like Tepco is trying to gain time before we start suspecting the problem is “here”.

Tepco has to take care of literally tens of thousand tones of contaminated water and it keeps increasing. It’s only the matter of time that they run out of the capacity. They will have to discharge it inevitably.
However, they are still struggling to convince the local fishery’s agency.

In this situation, Tepco can never let press question about the possibility that coolant water is directly leaking to the sea. It would provoke the fishery’s agency and the entire world.

Before we smell it, Tepco wants to shut out the sea.
so this is what the press must question about.

As a matter of fact, the sea wall project is failing. In 2~3 weeks, groundwater would come up to the ground. Tepco will end up pumping up the water to have more contaminated water to take care of. There’s least they could do.


http://fukushima-diary.com/2013/08/tepco-to-pump-up-accumulating-groundwater-by-the-end-of-august-tepco-groundwater-may-overflow/

Tepco to pump up accumulating groundwater by the end of August / Tepco “Groundwater may overflow”

Following up this article..[Column] Tepco literally “swamped” in sea contamination prevention [URL]
On 8/2/2013, Tepco reported Nuclear Regulation Authority that they are planning to pump up the increasing groundwater.
They represented the sense of impending crisis.
Due to the impervious wall, groundwater is increasing unexpectedly quickly. In order to control the increasing water volume, Tepco plans to install the water gathering basin on the east side of reactor2 by the end of August. They will start pumping up water after the installation.
Contaminated water management committee of Nuclear Regulation Authority stated they may need to take some prevention in 3~4 weeks.
However, it hasn’t been decided how to treat the pumped water.

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