Rebuilding a Region: Tōhoku Five Years Later

The Fukushima Cleanup Will Take Generations

Politics Economy Science Technology Society

Five years after the Tōhoku tsunami triggered the second-worst nuclear accident in history, the cleanup team at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station has yet to stem the buildup of contaminated water at the site or determine the precise location of much of the reactor fuel. Veteran journalist Takahashi Hideki, who has reported extensively on the Fukushima accident, visited the site recently to report on the progress of decommissioning and the monumental obstacles that stand in the way of true recovery.

Give It a Century or So

Of course, ascertaining the state and location of the melted fuel is not the same as extracting it. How does one remove molten radioactive fuel from the containment vessels?

One oft-mentioned possibility is to fill the PCVs with water and then use some as-yet undeveloped equipment to extract the solidified debris. But will the damaged vessels be able to hold water? According to Madarame Haruki, who served as chairman of the old Nuclear Safety Commission, “It’s going to be very difficult to prevent the water from leaking out of the containment vessels, and if they can’t fill them with water, then it’s hard to see how they can use a robot to remove the fuel.” Moreover, even if they can somehow repair the vessels and fill them with water, they will need to find a way of breaking up fuel that has congealed into a solid mass. Then there is the problem of storing the fuel after extraction.

Even without melted cores and damaged containment structures to contend with, decommissioning a nuclear reactor can take decades. The complete dismantling of Units 1 and 2 at the Mihama nuclear power plant in Fukui Prefecture (which Kansai Electric recently decided to retire for reasons of age and cost) is expected to take 30 years. The estimate for Unit 1 at the Tsuruga nuclear plant (Japan Atomic Power Company) is 25 years. As for decommissioning the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi, Madarame says, “It could probably be completed in a century or so.”

The 40-year timetable issued by TEPCO and the government is based on little more than highly optimistic guesswork. Only when the team has a clear picture of the state and location of the reactors’ nuclear fuel will they be able to draw up a realistic roadmap for decommissioning.

That being the case, we should not be surprised if the authorities release a drastically revised timetable in the not-too-distant future. And when that happens, there will be little point in criticizing the cleanup team for the delay. The important thing in this situation is not staying on schedule but getting it right. The future of Fukushima Prefecture depends on it.

(Originally written in Japanese. Article photos courtesy of the author. Banner photo: Tanaka Shun’ichi, chairman of Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority, tours TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station in February 2016. © Jiji.)

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