Explosion unlikely, says Japan

March 31, 2011 10:10 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 03:53 am IST - SINGAPORE:

Japan and the IAEA “share” the assessment that “there is no likelihood of reactor explosion” at the quake-and-tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi civil nuclear plant.

This was stated by Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano in Tokyo on Thursday, hours before the visiting French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, called for “an international safety standard” for nuclear power reactors. It was not immediately clear whether Japan was now ruling out “hydrogen explosions” of the kind that rocked the first and third units at the power station shortly after the March 11 quake and tsunami or whether the new assurance would apply to a much more catastrophic blast.

Speaking after holding talks with Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, Mr. Sarkozy offered to support Tokyo in overcoming the prolonged crisis at the stricken plant. He also expressed the “hope to have an international safety standard established by the end of this year” for nuclear reactors worldwide.

Mr. Sarkozy drew attention to the “French expertise in reactor decommissioning and radiation monitoring”. France is known to possess capabilities in using robots and other state-of-the-art devices to manage radiation-related hazards and nuclear reactor problems.

Without going into specifics like the possible deployment of robots, Japanese Foreign Office spokesman Hidenobu Sobashima said: “We certainly expect that some sort of equipment will be introduced in connection with the advice and cooperation they [France and the United States] are offering.”

Radiation levels

Independently, the IAEA said in Vienna that Japan was asked to “carefully assess” the radiation levels in places outside the 20-km evacuation zone around the Fukushima Daiichi plant. The IAEA was also sending an expert to work closely with the Japanese teams monitoring the marine environment.

Responding to the IAEA intervention, Mr. Edano said Japan's own assessment was that there was “no immediate risk to human health” in areas outside the evacuation zone. However, Tokyo would intensify monitoring and act in concert with the IAEA.

On the moves by several countries to ban food imports from the radiation-hit areas of Japan, Mr. Edano said Tokyo “has been providing relevant information on the nuclear power plant accidents, proactively, to foreign governments.” So, he suggested that other countries should “react in a rational manner based on scientific findings.”

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