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Japan to Release Treated Water from Crippled Fukushima Plant into Sea
(MENAFN- Saudi Press Agency) Tokyo, Oct 17, 2020, SPA -- The Japanese government plans to release into the sea treated radioactive water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant crippled by a powerful earthquake and tsunami in 2011 amid concerns over the environmental impact, Kyodo cited sources close to the matter as saying.
An official decision may be made as early as this month and will put an end to seven years of debate over how to dispose of the water used to cool the power station that suffered core meltdowns in the disasters.
Earlier this year, a government subcommittee reported that releasing the water into the sea or evaporating it are "realistic options."
Local fishers and residents have been opposed to the release into the sea due to fears consumers would shun seafood caught nearby. South Korea, which currently bans imports of seafood from the area, has also repeatedly voiced concern about the environmental impact.
Hiroshi Kishi, president of JF Zengyoren, a nationwide federation of fisheries cooperatives, expressed opposition to releasing the water into the sea in his meeting with Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato on Thursday.
The government will set up a panel to take measures to address such fears with Fukushima government officials and the local fisheries industry, the sources said.
As releasing the water into the sea requires construction work and an assessment by the Nuclear Regulation Authority, it would likely take around two years for the discharge to start, they said.
--SPA
03:57 LOCAL TIME 00:57 GMT
0031
An official decision may be made as early as this month and will put an end to seven years of debate over how to dispose of the water used to cool the power station that suffered core meltdowns in the disasters.
Earlier this year, a government subcommittee reported that releasing the water into the sea or evaporating it are "realistic options."
Local fishers and residents have been opposed to the release into the sea due to fears consumers would shun seafood caught nearby. South Korea, which currently bans imports of seafood from the area, has also repeatedly voiced concern about the environmental impact.
Hiroshi Kishi, president of JF Zengyoren, a nationwide federation of fisheries cooperatives, expressed opposition to releasing the water into the sea in his meeting with Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato on Thursday.
The government will set up a panel to take measures to address such fears with Fukushima government officials and the local fisheries industry, the sources said.
As releasing the water into the sea requires construction work and an assessment by the Nuclear Regulation Authority, it would likely take around two years for the discharge to start, they said.
--SPA
03:57 LOCAL TIME 00:57 GMT
0031

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