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TEPCO Completes Removal Of Spent Fuel Rods From Fukushima No. 3 Reactor

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JAPAN TODAY



 


Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (TEPCO), the operator of the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, said Monday it had successfully removed spent uranium fuel from a damaged reactor building in a key step in its clean up of the site after a nuclear disaster a decade ago.

TEPCO said it had transferred around 170 tons of spent uranium fuel from high up in the building housing the No. 3 reactor to a safer location -- the second successful operation of its kind and the first to be carried out by remote control, due to the high radiation in the building.

It comes as Japan prepares to mark the 10th anniversary of the March 11, 2011 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disasters. It will provide TEPCO with important experience and data for the much tougher and time consuming task of extracting melted reactor cores and debris in the coming decades.

On Sunday, the last six of 566 used fuel assemblies were removed from the spent fuel pool by a crane operated by a team located about 500 meters away, TEPCO said in a statement.

The transfer from the No. 3 reactor started in April 2019 following the safe removal of more than 1,300 fuel rods from the badly damaged reactor No. 4 reactor in 2014.

The work on the No. 3 reactor required the removal of huge pieces of damaged equipment that fell into the pool during the explosions that rocked the nuclear site in Fukushima, in the days after an earthquake and tsunami knocked out power and emergency cooling.

Three overheated reactors melted down in the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.

In the decade since, TEPCO has had to contend with huge amounts of contaminated water building up at the site due to the nature of its ad hoc cooling system used to keep the melted fuel in a safe state.
 
 

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