Japan will on Monday start
constructing an underground ice wall at the crippled Fukushima nuclear
plant, freezing the soil under broken reactors to slow the build-up of
radioactive water, officials said.
The wall is intended to
block groundwater from nearby hillsides that has been flowing under the
plant and mixing with polluted water already there.
The Nuclear Regulation
Authority, the national watchdog, last week gave the go-ahead to
beginning the construction of the ice wall at Fukushima Daiichi, owned
and operated by Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO).
The government-funded scheme
will see pipes laid deep in the soil through which refrigerant will be
piped to create the 1.5-kilometre (0.9-mile) frozen wall that will stem
the inflow of groundwater.
The idea of freezing a section
of the ground, which was proposed for Fukushima last year, has
previously been used in the construction of tunnels near watercourses.
However, scientists point out that it has not been done on this scale before nor for the proposed length of time.
Coping with the huge -- and
growing -- amount of water at the tsunami-damaged plant is proving to be
one of the biggest challenges for TEPCO, as it tries to clean up the
mess after the worst nuclear disaster in a generation, in which three
reactors went into meltdown.
However, scientists point out that it has not been done on this scale before nor for the proposed length of time.
Coping with the huge -- and
growing -- amount of water at the tsunami-damaged plant is proving to be
one of the biggest challenges for TEPCO, as it tries to clean up the
mess after the worst nuclear disaster in a generation, in which three
reactors went into meltdown.
As well as all the water
used to keep broken reactors cool, the utility must also deal with water
that makes its way along subterranean watercourses from mountainsides
to the sea.
Last month TEPCO began a bypass system that diverts groundwater into the sea to try to reduce the volume of contaminated water.
Full decommissioning of the
plant at Fukushima is expected to take several decades. An area around
the plant remains out of bounds, and experts warn that some settlements
may have to be abandoned because of high levels of radiation.
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