August 15, 2013
from
RT
Website
An aerial view shows
Tokyo Electric Power
Co.'s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled
Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture
(Reuters / Kyodo)
Scientists at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear power plant are preparing
for their toughest clean-up operation yet - two and a half years
after three of the plant’s reactors suffered a meltdown in Japan’s
worst-ever nuclear power disaster.
The operation, to remove 400 tons of highly irradiated spent fuel
beneath the plant’s damaged Reactor No. 4, could set off a
catastrophe greater than any we have ever seen, independent experts
warn.
An operation of this scale, says plant
operator Tokyo Electric Power Company, has never been attempted
before, and is wrought with danger.
An uncontrolled leak of nuclear fuel could cause more radiation than
the March 2011 disaster or the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe, say
consultants Mycle Schneider and Antony Froggatt.
"Full release from the Unit-4 spent
fuel pool, without any containment or control, could cause by
far the most serious radiological disaster to date," the
scientists say in their World Nuclear Industry Status Report
2013.
The operation has been tried before -
but only with the aid of computers. This time it will be a
painstaking manual process.
Here’s what needs to be done:
more than 1,300 used fuel rod
assemblies, packing radiation 14,000 times the equivalent of the
Hiroshima nuclear bomb, need to carefully be removed from their
cooling pool.
Arnie Gunderson, a veteran US
nuclear engineer and director of
Fairewinds Energy Education, told
Reuters that,
"they are going to have difficulty
in removing a significant number of the rods," especially given
their close proximity to each other, which risks breakage and
the release of radiation.
Gundersen told Reuters of an incredibly
dangerous "criticality" that would result if a chain reaction takes
place at any point, if the rods break or even so much as collide
with each other in the wrong way.
The resulting radiation is too great for
the cooling pool to absorb - it simply has not been designed to do
so.
"The problem with a fuel pool
criticality is that you can't stop it. There are no control rods
to control it," Gundsersen said. "The spent fuel pool cooling
system is designed only to remove decay heat, not heat from
an ongoing nuclear reaction."
The base of the pool where the fuel
assemblies are situated is 18 meters above the ground.
The pool itself is 10 by 12 meters, and
the rods are seven meters under the surface of the water. One
problem with that pool is it has been exposed to air in the 2011
catastrophe, when its roof was blown off by the explosion.
The operation is urgent - because even a minor earthquake could
trigger an uncontrolled fuel leak.
A general view of the
cover installation for the spent fuel removed
from the cooling pool
is pictured at the No.4 reactor building
at Tokyo Electric
Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled
Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture
(Reuters / Noboru
Hashimoto / Pool)
The removal process is due to begin in November, with TEPCO
predicting it will take approximately a year.
Although TEPCO is confident the
operation will be a success, some experts are more skeptical. TEPCO
is currently failing to contain radioactive water seepage in another
part of the facility.
Two empty fuel rods were removed as part of a test operation some
time ago, but,
"to jump to the conclusion that it
is going to work just fine for the rest of them is quite a leap
of logic," Reuters quoted Gundersen, of Fairewinds Energy
Education as saying.
A giant steel frame currently towers
over Unit 4, soon to be tasked with the extraction of the fuel
assemblies.
Each fuel rod weighs at around 300
kilograms and is 4.5 meters long. They also contain plutonium, one
of the most radioactive substances known to man. The radiation
builds up during the later stages of a core’s operation.
Toshio Kimura, a former TEPCO technician, told Reuters that
the operation would normally be assisted by computers, but that
luxury is gone.
"Previously it was a
computer-controlled process that memorized the exact locations
of the rods down to the millimeter and now they don't have that.
It has to be done manually so there is a high risk that they
will drop and break one of the fuel rods," he said.
He is also expecting many issues for
TEPCO ahead, as the process is estimated to take years.
The scientists’ task is not made easier
by the fact that the building is also prone to corrosion from salt
water.
Removing the fuel rods is just one part of the cleanup operation,
itself expected to take around four decades - according to the IAEA
- during which any number of other problems could arise.
The fuel rod scare comes as TEPCO is currently failing to contain
radioactive water seepage in another part of the facility - itself a
growing issue with no concrete solution, apart from building a
special underground wall.
But with water quantity building up at
an alarming rate, the most likely version of events is that the
radioactive water will simply have to be released into the Pacific
at some point.
According to TEPCO, there are still "no
perfect solutions."
"If you build a wall, of course the
water is going to accumulate there. And there is no other way
for the water to go but up or sideways and eventually lead to
the ocean," Masashi Goto, a nuclear engineer who has worked at
several TEPCO plants, told Reuters.
"So now, the question is how long do
we have?"
This situation is not made easier by the
fact that Japan is a seismically active island.
Earthquakes keep striking at random, and
even a small tremor could set in motion a catastrophic chain of
events.
A worker walks in front of water tanks at
Tokyo Electric Power
Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled
Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture
(Reuters / Noboru
Hashimoto / Pool)
Costs soaring
- no end in sight
Clean-up costs at the nuclear plant are projected to be in the
billions of dollars, as the facility’s operator has failed to meet
its targets, leading to increased public distrust and forcing the
government to step in.
In the two years since the March 2011 meltdown, the costs of the
cleanup project could be spiraling out of control financially. If
the clean-up is not carried out, it could cause incalculable
problems for Japan’s economy, particularly in agriculture.
The Institute for Industrial Sciences at the University of Tokyo has
recently estimated that the levels of radiation along the country’s
coastline are way above the government target.
"We have detected over 20 spots
around Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant with levels of radiation
five to 10 times higher than the surrounding areas, with
diameters ranging from tens to hundreds of meters," the
institute said.
TEPCO had been left to its own devices
two years ago to deal with the clean-up and the compensation
payments to people in the contaminated region.
Now, with recent news of over 300 tons
of contaminated water being leaked into the Pacific for more than
two years, the Japanese government has decided to step in.
In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, the government ordered
Fukushima plant operator TEPCO to bear the entire costs of the
clean-up, but also told it to get back to profitability as soon as
possible through cost-cutting, so that it could pay off its debts.
The clean-up will weigh very heavily on
Japan’s energy consumption, however, on top of the already stringent
energy austerity measures. But TEPCO has insisted it will not be
able to handle the clean-up bill, which is now projected at more
than $10 billion.
The company has already spent $3 billion
and will require a major injection of $10 billion by March 2014, it
says.
|