Japan wants to drain water from Fukushima to the Pacific



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reThe Japanese government is aimed at draining the water stored at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, but which is still contaminated with traces of tritium in the Pacific in the coming years. According to Japanese media reports, the government made the decision internally.

Patrick Welter

Patrick Welter

Business and political correspondent in Japan, based in Tokyo.

An official decision is expected shortly. Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama told reporters that no decision had been made at the moment. The emphasis was on today. But new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is pushing for a quick decision. Cities near the power plant are also calling for a quick decision to clarify.

This is the end of a discussion that has been going on for years. As it stands, it is approximately 1.23 million tons of rain and cooling water that has been pumped from the reactor buildings and stored in more than 1,000 tanks at the power plant site.

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The amount would be enough to fill around 500 Olympic 50-meter pools. In the Pacific, which makes up more than half of Earth’s water, it would only be a very small fraction. The water has been purified of radioactive substances except for traces of tritium. Tritium has a half-life of approximately 12.3 years. Almost ten years after the disaster, the radioactivity of tritium in the oldest stored waters has already been reduced by almost half.

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