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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Plastic pad clogs up Fukushima water cleaning system
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 29, 2013


Water cleaning system at Fukushima halted
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 28, 2013 - A system to decontaminate radioactive water at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant has been halted due to a defect only hours after it started operations, the plant's operator said Saturday.

The Advanced Liquid Processing System (ALPS) is designed to remove radioactive materials contained in contaminated water and is expected to play a crucial role in the utility's fight against the toxic water accumulating at the plant, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said.

The equipment was started in the early hours of Friday but was stopped at 10:37 pm (1337 GMT) the same day when it was found not to be properly flushing fluid used to remove radioactive particles, TEPCO said in a press release.

"We are in the process of investigating the cause of the incident," the statement said.

There are three ALPS systems at the plant, which was left in a meltdown crisis by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

The utility initially started trial operations of two of the three systems in March but halted them in June after corrosion in one was found to be causing water leakage. A third system was activated on Friday before the stoppage.

TEPCO has poured thousands of tonnes of water onto the plant's reactors and continues to douse them to keep them cool.

The utility says they are now stable but need more water every day to prevent them running out of control again.

Highly polluted water from the plant is contaminating hundreds of tonnes of groundwater daily and is also leaking from temporary storage tanks, making its way into the sea.

TEPCO has so far revealed no clear plan for disposal of the stored polluted water.

A piece of plastic padding which clogged up a drain is thought to have caused the breakdown of a decontamination system at Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, the operator said Sunday.

The Advanced Liquid Processing System (ALPS), designed to remove radioactive material from contaminated water, is expected to play a crucial role in treating huge amounts of toxic water accumulating at the plant.

But it was halted due to a defect only hours after starting operations.

Workers found that a plastic pad, which fixed a ladder in the system, had worked loose and got stuck in a drain, probably causing the defect, said operator Tokyo Electric Power Co.

The ALPS system was switched on early Friday but was stopped late evening the same day when it was found not to be properly flushing fluid used to remove radioactive particles, TEPCO said in a statement.

There are three ALPS systems at the plant, hit by reactor meltdowns sparked by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

The utility started trial operations of two of the three systems in March but halted them in June after corrosion in one was found to be causing water leakage.

The third system was activated on Friday before the stoppage occurred.

TEPCO has poured thousands of tonnes of water onto the plant's reactors to keep them cool, and continues to douse them.

The utility says they are now stable but need cooling water daily.

TEPCO has so far disclosed no clear plan for disposing of the huge amounts of stored polluted water.

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Fukushima operator seeks reactor restart
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 27, 2013
Fukushima operator TEPCO on Friday asked Japan's nuclear watchdog for permission to restart a separate atomic power station, as it resumed cleaning polluted water at the crippled plant. Tokyo Electric Power switched on treatment systems at the tsunami-wrecked site, seen as key to winning public support for the eventual dumping into the ocean of thousands of tonnes of now-contaminated water. ... read more


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