Latest News

Japan may require back-up emergency power

(Agencies)
Updated: 2011-03-30 11:13
Large Medium Small

TOKYO - Japan's government may require nuclear plant operators to have additional emergency power in place to cool reactors and spent nuclear fuel pools in case existing systems are knocked out, a ministry official said on Wednesday.

Related readings:
Japan may require back-up emergency power Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant in restoration
Japan may require back-up emergency power People urged not to eat Fukushima leafy vegetable
Japan may require back-up emergency power Smoke seen billowing from Fukushima's No. 3 reactor
Japan may require back-up emergency power IAEA sees positive developments at Fukushima plant

"We need to consider this especially after the latest incident at Fukushima Daiichi where external and emergency power stopped," the official said.

The magnitude 9.0 quake and subsequent tsunami on March 11 that crippled a nuclear plant at Fukushima has led many nuclear plant operators to reconsider plant safety and install power source cars at their plants.

Workers at Fukushima may have to struggle for weeks or months under extremely dangerous conditions to re-start cooling systems vital to control the reactors and avert a meltdown.

On Monday, highly contaminated water was found in concrete tunnels extending beyond one reactor, while at the weekend radiation was 100,000 times greater than normal in water inside another.  

That poses a major dilemma for the operator Tokyo Electric Power , which wants to douse the reactors to cool them, but not worsen the spread of radiation.  

分享按钮