Japanese nuclear power plant Onagawa leaks radioactive water
Almaty. April 8. Kazakhstan Today - The latest strong aftershock to hit Japan Thursday night damaged Onagawa NPP, which now leaks radioactive water, Kazakhstan Today reports.
Water leaked out of spent fuel pools at the Onagawa nuclear plant in northeast Japan after a strong aftershock rocked the region late on Thursday, but there was no change in the radiation levels outside the plant, operator Tohoku Electric Power Co said on Friday, Reuters reported.
It said water sloshed out of spent fuel pools in the plant's No.1, No.2 and No.3 reactors, which had been shut down after the 9.0 magnitude quake on March 11, and had also leaked in three other locations in the No.3 reactor complex.
The Onagawa plant, in Miyagi prefecture, was automatically shut and later cooled down safely after it was hit by a tsunami 13 metres (43 ft) higher than its base level triggered by the March 11 quake.
The operator had reported similar leakage of water from spent fuel pools and at other facilities at the plant after the March 11 quake. But engineers removed leaked water and cleaned up the contaminated area by March 31.
Tohoku Electric said on Friday two out of three lines supplying off-site power to the Onagawa site - in so-called cold shutdown since the March 11 quake - were lost last night in the strongest aftershock so far of the earlier quake.
Cooling operations of its spent pool fuels resumed after they stopped due to the quake, it said, and there was still an emergency backup generator to fall back on.
"We detected a small rise in radiation levels inside the reactor buildings, and are trying to find the locations of the leaks," a Tohoku Electric official said. "We see no change in radiation levels outside the reactor buildings."
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), citing information from Japanese authorities, said off-site power was lost at some other nuclear facilities in the country after Thursday evening's quake, and that emergency power supply was operating.
"The epicentre of the earthquake was 20 km (12 miles) from the Onagawa nuclear power plant and approximately 120 km (75 miles) from the Fukushima Daiichi and Daini nuclear power plants," it said.
At the Fukushima Daiichi plant, which operator Tokyo Electric Power Co is struggling to stabilise after the March 11 quake and tsunami, the IAEA said it was confirmed that no changes had been observed at on-site radiation monitoring posts after Thursday's aftershock.
Photo: www.novinite.com
This information may not be reproduced without reference to Kazakhstan Today. Copyright of materials of News Agency Kazakhstan Today.