picture from TEPCO website |
On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9.1 earthquake struck
off the northeast coast of Honshu, Japan, generating a deadly tsunami.
Systems at the Fukushima nuclear plant detected the earthquake and
automatically shut down the nuclear reactors. Emergency diesel generators
automatically turned on to keep coolant pumping around the nuclear cores to try
and keep them cool.
But soon after the tsunami wave which was over 46 feet high
hit Fukushima. The water overwhelmed the defensive sea wall, flooding the plant
and knocking out the emergency generators. Workers rushed to restore power, but
in the days that followed the nuclear fuel in three of the reactors overheated
and suffered a nuclear meltdown where
the nuclear cores were partly melted.
The Fukushima nuclear disaster released radioactive
materials into the environment and forced thousands of people to evacuate their
homes. Ever since 2011 crews have continuously pumped water through the
destroyed reactors to keep the nuclear cores cool. In addition water flows
naturally from the mountain towards the sea.
Approximately 150 tons of groundwater, which naturally
runs from the mountain side to the ocean, flows into the reactor buildings cools the reactor cores and
become newly contaminated water. Various countermeasures are taken (filtration to remove radionuclides) and storage to prevent the contaminated water from flowing out to the
port or that the contaminated water may leak from the storing tanks (secondary containment measures).
The Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) which owns the
nuclear plant has been pumping, filtering and storing the water in tanks at the
plant. Now, they say that they are running out of space to store the water on
land. Last summer TEPCO obtained the approval of the International Atomic
energy Agency (IAEA) for a plan to begin releasing the stored water into the
Pacific Ocean. The plan is to release the stored water sometime this year.
IAEA Director General Grossi accepted Japan’s invitation and
appointed a Task Force of independent experts and IAEA staff to carry out the
three-pronged review – regulatory, technical and independent sampling and
analysis – against international safety standards. These safety standards
reflect an international consensus and serve as a global reference for
protecting people and the environment from the harmful effects of ionizing
radiation. In January the IAEA Task Force completed their second regulatory
reviews in Japan.
No one is taking this lightly. The TEPCO crews have
continued to pump cooling water through the wrecked reactors to constantly cool
the melted nuclear fuel. This cooling water picks up radiation in the form of
radio nuclides. The water is then passes through a specialty filtering process
to remove and capture much of the radiation, but the process does not effectively
capture tritium because tritium forms water molecules and no filtration process in perfect. Tritium is a hydrogen
atom that has two neutrons in the nucleus and one proton. Though produced
naturally in the upper atmosphere, Tritium is also produced as a byproduct in
nuclear reactors and nuclear explosions. Tritium has a 12 year half life and gives off only low-energy
beta particles that are believed to pose limited risks for marine life and
humans.
This project to release continues to move forward under the
oversight of the IAEA and the Japanese Nuclear Regulatory Administration.
Various groups are concerned that not enough testing has been done, and other
radionuclides may also be passing through the filtration system. The Japanese
fishing industry and other countries in the Asia-Pacific region have also
expressed concern. You can review the Japanese NRA report and form your own opinion.
We are 12 years away from the Fukushima nuclear disaster and as nations look to decarbonize their electric grids nuclear is once more front and center in the discussion of how to provide carbon free base load to the power grid. Advanced Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) are a key part of the Department of Energy plans for the future of electric generation.
No comments:
Post a Comment