Google – AFP, Shingo Ito (AFP), 26 August 2013
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A Tepco
picture from March 15, 2011 shows smoke rising from unit 3
reactor building at
the Fukushima nuclear plant (TEPCO/AFP/File, TEPCO)
|
TOKYO —
TEPCO's handling of radioactive water at Fukushima has been like
"whack-a-mole", a minister said Monday after visiting the battered
plant, pledging Japan's government would step up its involvement at the site.
The
colourful comments come after 300 tonnes of toxic liquid was found to have
leaked from one of the hundreds of tanks storing heavily polluted water used to
cool broken reactors at the plant.
"With
regard to TEPCO's handling of contaminated water, it has been just like
whack-a-mole," said industry minister Toshimitsu Motegi, in reference to
the anarchic fairground game in which players bash creatures that pop up from
random holes.
"From
now on, the government will play a greater role," he said.
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Nuclear
watchdog members inspect
contaminated water tanks at Fukushima
nuclear power
plant on August 23, 2013
(Nuclear Regulation Authority/AFP/File,
Nuclear
Regulation Authority)
|
Critics
accuse TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Co) of being incapable of dealing with the
vast -- and growing -- volumes of radioactive water at the site.
Last week's
leak was dubbed the most serious single incident since the plant went into
meltdown in March 2011 after being hit by a quake and tsunami.
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe in early August described as "urgent" the battle
to stop contaminated water escaping into the ocean.
Chief
Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said in Tokyo that Abe had ordered his
industry minister to take "every possible measure", including the use
of reserve funds from the national budget.
"The
leak of contaminated water from the tank was extremely regrettable," Suga
told a news conference. "Failing to manage tanks properly is a big
problem."
"As a
government, we will do whatever we can do to resolve the problem."
Inspectors
from Japan's nuclear watchdog who toured the plant Friday declared water
storage at the site was "sloppy".
TEPCO said
Saturday the tank that sprang a leak was one of three to have been relocated
from its original spot because of subsidence.
The utility
has not yet pinpointed the reason for the problem with the first tank, but at
the weekend began emptying the other tanks that were moved with it in 2011.
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A Tokyo
Electric Power worker walks next
to waste water tanks at Japan's Fukushima
nuclear plant on June 12, 2013 (Pool/AFP/
File, Noboru Hashimoto)
|
Kishida
hopes to share experience in overcoming the consequences of nuclear disasters,
a spokesperson said.
More than
two years after the disaster at Fukushima, TEPCO continues to struggle with the
clean-up, a project expected to take around four decades.
A catalogue
of mishaps, often accompanied by a perceived unwillingness publicly to reveal
the extent of problems, is leading to a growing chorus warning of the need for
outside experts to step in and take control of the operation.
While no
one is officially recorded as having died as a direct result of the radiation
released by the meltdowns, large areas around the plant had to be evacuated.




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