Biggest spike in radiation at Japan power plant

March 30, 2011 10:08 am | Updated November 17, 2021 03:55 am IST - TOKYO

Seawater outside the hobbled nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan was found to contain 3,335 times the usual amount of radioactive iodine – the highest rate yet and a sign that more contaminated water was making its way into the ocean, officials said Wednesday.

The amount of iodine-131 found offshore some 300 metres south of the coastal Fukushima Daiichii power plant does not pose an immediate threat to human health but was a “concern,” said Hidehiko Nishiyama, a Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency official. He said there was no fishing in the area.

“We will nail down the cause, and will do our utmost to prevent it from rising further,” Mr. Nishiyama said.

The power plant has been leaking radiation since a March 11 tsunami slammed into Japan’s northeast, knocking out power and backup systems crucial to keeping temperatures down inside the plant’s reactors.

Residents within 20 kilometres have been evacuated, while those up to 30 kilometres have been urged to leave as radiation has made its way into vegetables, raw milk and water. Last week, tap water as far away as Tokyo, 220 kilometres to the south, contained levels of cancer-causing iodine-131 considered unsafe for infants.

The latest findings, based on a sample taken Tuesday, highlight the urgency of stabilising the crippled power plant. The mission has been fraught with setbacks, as emergency crews have dealt with fires, explosions and radiation scares in the frantic bid to prevent a complete meltdown.

The government acknowledged Tuesday that its safeguards had been insufficient to protect the facility against the magnitude-9.0 earthquake and tsunami.

“Our preparedness was not sufficient,” Chief Cabinet secretary Yukio Edano told reporters Tuesday. “When the current crisis is over, we must examine the accident closely and thoroughly review” the safety standards.

An Associated Press investigation found that Tokyo Electric Power Co. officials had dismissed scientific evidence and geological history that indicated that a massive earthquake, and subsequent tsunami, was far more likely than they believed.

That left the complex with nowhere near enough protection against the tsunami.

Highly toxic plutonium was the latest contaminant found seeping into the soil outside the plant, TEPCO said. Safety officials said the amounts did not pose a risk to humans, but the finding supports suspicions that dangerously radioactive water is leaking from damaged nuclear fuel rods. “The situation is very grave,” Edano said.

Nikkei, Japan’s top business newspaper, called it “outrageous” that TEPCO had been slow to release information about trenches outside the reactors filled with contaminated water, one just a few inches from overflowing.

TEPCO’s shares plunged nearly 20 percent on Tuesday. Its share price has nose-dived a staggering 73 percent since the tsunami.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan reiterated in a speech to parliament that Japan was grappling with its worst problems since World War II.

More than 11,000 bodies have been recovered, but officials say the final death toll is expected to exceed 18,000. Hundreds of thousands of people remain homeless, their homes and livelihoods destroyed. Damage could amount to $310 billion, the most expensive natural disaster on record.

“This quake, tsunami and the nuclear accident are the biggest crises for Japan” in decades, Mr. Kan said Tuesday. He said the crises remained unpredictable, but added, “We will continue to handle it in a state of maximum alert.”

Mr. Kan has faced increasing criticism from opposition lawmakers over the handling of a nuclear disaster stretching into a third week.

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