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Japan Power

Fukushima: the Removal of Nuclear Fuel Rods From Damaged Reactor Building Begins (theguardian.com) 154

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Workers at the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant have begun removing fuel rods from a storage pool near one of the three reactors that suffered meltdowns eight years ago. The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said on Monday that work had begun to remove the first of 566 used and unused fuel assemblies in reactor building No 3. The fuel rods stored in unit No 3's cooling pool were not damaged in the 2011 disaster, when a powerful earthquake and tsunami knocked out Fukushima Daiichi's backup power supply and triggered the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl, 25 years earlier.

Tepco said the operation to remove the fuel rods, which are in uncovered pools, would take two years, adding that transferring them to safer ground would better protect them in the event of another catastrophic earthquake. Workers are remotely operating a crane to raise the fuel from a storage rack in the pool and place it into a protective cask. The whole process occurs underwater to prevent radiation leaks. The utility plans to repeat the procedure in the two other reactors that suffered meltdowns.

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Fukushima: the Removal of Nuclear Fuel Rods From Damaged Reactor Building Begins

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    When are we going to find out that all the older reactors similar to Fukushima are shut down safely... Seriously, I have no great problem with the newer designs, but the older ones need phased out, not renewed.

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Tuesday April 16, 2019 @01:43AM (#58443004) Homepage Journal

      When are we going to find out that all the older reactors similar to Fukushima are shut down safely... Seriously, I have no great problem with the newer designs, but the older ones need phased out, not renewed.

      When the NIMBYs stop fighting the deployment of newer designs. As long as pseudo-regulatory barriers erected by the general public make development of new plants based on new designs financially infeasible, companies will stretch the operation of their existing plants far beyond their original design lifespan. It is rather amazing just how much the anti-nuclear movement has made nuclear safety worse.

      • When the NIMBYs stop fighting the deployment of newer designs.

        Is there a worldwide list of reactors that are at risk, and that need to be replaced by newer designs ? And was the Fukushima reactor on that list prior to the incident ?

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          Is there a worldwide list of reactors that are at risk, and that need to be replaced by newer designs ? And was the Fukushima reactor on that list prior to the incident ?

          Yes. Every Generation I or II reactor [wikipedia.org] (everything built before 1996) should be replaced by or upgraded in place to being a Generation III reactor as soon as it is practical to do so. The last Generation I reactor was still online for about four years after Fukushima happened. Fukushima was generation II.

      • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
        That's easy just build it in Cher's back yard.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The UK doesn't have a NIMBY problem with new nuclear. Permission was already granted, on the same site as existing reactors, no objections possible.

        They still used the same old designs because the cost was already completely insane and adding further risk with new technology would have been unacceptable to investors and the government that was subsidising it.

        The electricity it generates has a guaranteed price of £92.50/MWh, at least double current wind prices. By the time it's finished it will b

        • They still used the same old designs because the cost was already completely insane and adding further risk with new technology would have been unacceptable to investors and the government that was subsidising it.

          This is the crazy thing about nuclear regulation. In every other industry, engineering has improved in the last 50 years and we've got better, safer, more efficient designs for just about everything. Except because of the regulations we've somehow concluded the opposite to literally every other en

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            The aversion to new technology is not regulatory, it's risk based. Investors have been burned by things like thorium reactors that were supposed to be wonderful but ended up being hugely problematic and going way over the expected budget.

            The government had to offer that insane price for nuclear generated electricity because no-one wanted to built Hinkley C. Even with the massive subsidy they had difficulty convincing the French and Chinese to do it. The French company, EDF, has been struggling to come off g

            • I'm not referring to new tech likes thorium. The reactor designs are ancient; it's the equivalent of building a brand new Ford Corinna because people are afraid to get a modern far with airbags, crumple zones and so on.

              So we're stuck with 40 year old designs and a whole bunch of bizarre expense.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Oh, and I should mention that we have more than enough renewable energy for the entire country in the UK. Particularly in the north there is a vast amount of untapped wind power, enough for us and to export to the rest of Europe.

            The government isn't keen on exploiting it though, because it worries that being dependent on Scotland for energy could be a problem if/when Soctland becomes independent.

        • Not much different than the Georgia reactor canceled last year. An already approved location, design and layout.

          It was canceled after spending $8billion and it was projected to need another $8billion to finish it. The Georgia rate payers are now paying a couple hundred a year every year for the next 30 years for a reactor that never got built.

          This isn't any different than the reactor under construction in Scandinavia (Sweden I think) that's projected cost is nearly 8 billion euro's (roughly $12billion US).

      • When are we going to find out that all the older reactors similar to Fukushima are shut down safely... Seriously, I have no great problem with the newer designs, but the older ones need phased out, not renewed.

        When the NIMBYs stop fighting the deployment of newer designs. As long as pseudo-regulatory barriers erected by the general public make development of new plants based on new designs financially infeasible, companies will stretch the operation of their existing plants far beyond their original design lifespan. It is rather amazing just how much the anti-nuclear movement has made nuclear safety worse.

        Cool story bro! You just admitted that the older reactors were unsafe and should not have been built. Even if you had to blame the so called NIMBY's Why would someone want a reactor that you admit is unsafe to be built nearby?

        A couple problems with that. First, and probably the biggest problem is that the public was told that these earlier reactors were safe. In some cases, reality proved otherwise. So you have no credibility whatsoever. Why should they continue to believe your dismissive assertions over t

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          When are we going to find out that all the older reactors similar to Fukushima are shut down safely... Seriously, I have no great problem with the newer designs, but the older ones need phased out, not renewed.

          When the NIMBYs stop fighting the deployment of newer designs. As long as pseudo-regulatory barriers erected by the general public make development of new plants based on new designs financially infeasible, companies will stretch the operation of their existing plants far beyond their original design lifespan. It is rather amazing just how much the anti-nuclear movement has made nuclear safety worse.

          Cool story bro! You just admitted that the older reactors were unsafe and should not have been built. Even if you had to blame the so called NIMBY's Why would someone want a reactor that you admit is unsafe to be built nearby?

          Nothing is perfectly safe. You can either hide in a cave and hope that it doesn't collapse on you or you can embrace technology and the benefits it provides. If you do the latter, each subsequent generation is more reliable and safer than the last, barring serious mistakes. Therefore, it is almost always better to replace existing technology with never versions. This is true whether you're talking about nuclear powerplants, cars, airplanes, etc.

          A couple problems with that. First, and probably the biggest problem is that the public was told that these earlier reactors were safe. In some cases, reality proved otherwise. So you have no credibility whatsoever. Why should they continue to believe your dismissive assertions over their lying eyes?

          Next up, I'll shock you by saying that a reactor can be built that will be very safe.

          Nobody could have predicted a record tsunami. And yet in s

        • by suutar ( 1860506 )

          When are we going to find out that all the older reactors similar to Fukushima are shut down safely... Seriously, I have no great problem with the newer designs, but the older ones need phased out, not renewed.

          When the NIMBYs stop fighting the deployment of newer designs. As long as pseudo-regulatory barriers erected by the general public make development of new plants based on new designs financially infeasible, companies will stretch the operation of their existing plants far beyond their original design lifespan. It is rather amazing just how much the anti-nuclear movement has made nuclear safety worse.

          Cool story bro! You just admitted that the older reactors were unsafe and should not have been built.

          No, he said that running an older reactor long past its design lifespan is risky. This is surprising?

          • No, he said that running an older reactor long past its design lifespan is risky. This is surprising?

            Risky? Is that like............unsafe?

            Boogers. An unsafe reactor is unsafe. If you operate an unsafe reactor that you know is unsafe, it is on you.Try blaming your boss for you not maintaining your car and you run over someone because your brakes don't work - "He didn't pay me enough to maintain my car, so it is his fault."

            And running a reactor that he claims is unsafe (or risky) because it is being run in an unsafe (or risky) state is exactly and purposefully running an unsafe (or risky) reactor.

            Y'

            • by suutar ( 1860506 )

              You're conflating "risk at time built" and "risk at time well after design lifespan".

              • You're conflating "risk at time built" and "risk at time well after design lifespan".

                I'm not conflating anything. The point is that poster claimed that these reactors are running past their design date and are therefore a danger. They are not safe. He blames that on people who are anti-nuc.

                Here ya go - Challenge time! Prove your thesis. There have been 57 nuclear power plant Accidents since the Chernobyl kerfuffle in the 1980's. How many of those have been the direct result of operating reactors that should have been superannuated?

                Finally - how much regulation should be eliminated so

      • NIMBY doesn't stop nuclear, cost does. You all want to blame regulation but the simple fact is nuclear reactors are expensive and the only way to make them cheap is to get rid of the containment vessel and anti-terrorist protections.

        A modern nuclear reactor using proven 3rd generation technology costs upwards of $16billion dollars to build. A 4th gen reactor or experimental design will likely cost significantly more.

        With a $16 billion dollar construction cost, even amortized over 75 years (way longer than f

        • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

          NIMBY doesn't stop nuclear, cost does.

          Bullshit it doesn't. NIMBY was the reason that the research reactor at the University of Toronto was shut down. NIMBY was the same reason that Chalk Lake's replacement reactor is still not up and running. NIMBY was the same reason the Ontario Liberal Party(see gas plant scandal) shut down a multi-cycle natural gas power plant. NIMBY was the same reason for the literal decade long public hearings over refurbishment of Bruce and Pickering Nuclear.

          The "generation costs" are so insane because environmental

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          A modern nuclear reactor using proven 3rd generation technology costs upwards of $16billion dollars to build. A 4th gen reactor or experimental design will likely cost significantly more.

          Now ask yourself why it costs so much. In 2002, the cost of building a third-generation plant was only $2 billion. I can pretty much guarantee the actual cost of construction hasn't gone up by almost an order of magnitude in 17 years. And the design hasn't changed significantly, either. So where did that extra $14B go?

          • That $2 billion number you are quoting is bullshit.

            Two reactors in under construction in the US in 2016, one at a TVA facility and one in Georgia. Both were on existing nuclear sites, have had approval to build since 1970 and are using existing designs (no regulatory cost whatsoever). Both were canceled half built after they blew through the $2billion projected cost to $4-5billion and were canceled midway through when the in construction cost estimates showed $12-16 billion to finish them after Westinghouse

  • Great News!!! (Score:4, Informative)

    by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Tuesday April 16, 2019 @01:44AM (#58443006) Journal

    This is some very welcome news in developments at Fukushima as the foundations of Unit 3 are damaged. Workers at Fukushima have already removed 1000 fuel rods IIRC from that reactor building due to concerns about what would happen if the building collapsed.

    To get a better understanding of why its an urgent issue, a report called Nuclear Power Plant Security and Vulnerabilities [google.com.au] explored vulnerabilities at nuclear power plants.

    From that report the issue of spent fuel pool vulnerabilities warranted further study in the now declassified report Safety and Security of Commercial Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage: Public Report [google.com] by the Committee on the Safety and Security of Commercial Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage within the National Research Council. It details variations of scenarios created from vulnerabilities to terrorist attacks, however the potential outcomes are similar if they are initiated by a natural disaster.

    The most sobering scenarios came from analyzing what happens from loosing the cooling water from a spent fuel pool. Spent fuel rods are kept in a pool with a constant supply of water because the water not only cools them, it moderates the neutrons so that they don't become critical. One scenario examined from loosing the cooling water was a plutonium fire that creates plutonium oxide in the smoke with reactors that are MOX fueled, such as Unit 3 was. With several hundred tons of fuel it would be the largest plutonium fire we have ever faced, it would also be in open air.

    You can find information about plutonium oxidization Evaluation of source-term data for plutonium aerosolization [osti.gov] which starts at around 500 centigrade. I think that because of the proximity to the sea, plutonium chloride would also be created.

    Actions to reduce the possibility of these kinds of scenarios are simple and cost effective. Mainly by dry cask storing fuel that has cooled for 5 years and separating and dispersing spent fuel recently removed from the reactor throughout the pools of reactors that are still operating. All very practical, affordable actions for reducing this risk of reactors that are still operating.

    Information about the fuel removal process and the damage to the Unit 3 spent fuel pool in Tepco's Fukushima spent fuel removal plan [tepco.co.jp].

    There is very little point arguing about Nuclear power from an idealistic viewpoint. To idealize that nuclear power is perfect and requires no improvements means that the nuclear industry cannot evolve legal requirements for new processes. This, according to the official report into the Fukushima accident [nirs.org], is the main reason the disaster occurred.

    So this is a great time to commend the workers and engineers at the Fukushima plant and express gratitude for their efforts to get this disaster under control. Thank you!!!!

    • So this is a great time to commend the workers and engineers at the Fukushima plant and express gratitude for their efforts to get this disaster under control. Thank you!!!!

      I don't know about commending them. Maybe just let them know they no longer bring dishonor to their ancestors

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        So this is a great time to commend the workers and engineers at the Fukushima plant and express gratitude for their efforts to get this disaster under control. Thank you!!!!

        I don't know about commending them. Maybe just let them know they no longer bring dishonor to their ancestors

        I was very specific about where I directed my gratitude. It was TEPCO engineers that warned the board about the dangers, who then faced ridicule for doing so.

        The TEPCO board bought dishonor to Japan through their criminal negligence, one which threatened the sovereignty of the nation IIRC a opinion expressed by Abe to the TEPCO board. They were the ones who could have prevented this disaster but did not. NISA was also to blame for colluding with the TEPCO board, they failed to protect the Japanese p

    • Re:Great News!!! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by sfcat ( 872532 ) on Tuesday April 16, 2019 @03:40AM (#58443178)

      There is very little point arguing about Nuclear power from an idealistic viewpoint. To idealize that nuclear power is perfect and requires no improvements means that the nuclear industry cannot evolve legal requirements for new processes. This, according to the official report into the Fukushima accident [nirs.org], is the main reason the disaster occurred.

      Nuclear engineers want to build newer and safer designs. Nobody says nuclear doesn't need improvement. The problem is two fold: 1) newer designs need new regulations, 2) no politician wants to be on the hook for being the person to change nuclear regulations. Also, the standard for nuclear is perfection from the public's viewpoint. It shouldn't be, that's a dangerous and spurious standard as it will cause 10,000s of deaths (at least) making up for that power some other way that causes more harm (even if its workers falling from roofs or windmills).

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It's really not a regulatory issue. If you look at a lot of the accidents in the nuclear industry, they were because the industry and the regulator were too close and the regulator lacked teeth.

        The issue is that new designs are a risky investment. They take a lot of money to develop from paper to prototype to working commercial reactor, and often issues are discovered that delay things and add additional costs.

        That's why it's mostly governments investing in new designs. The risk is too high and the time bef

      • the standard for nuclear is perfection from the public's viewpoint. It shouldn't be, that's a dangerous and spurious standard

        Nuclear's drawbacks are severe enough that the standard should be perfection. There should be failsafes for the failsafes for the failsafes, and no problem should ever actually result in a meltdown condition. If you can't guarantee zero meltdowns, then you simply shouldn't do nuclear, period.

        Nuclear is fine in space. There are radioactives in some asteroids, so we don't even have to launch them if we actually get space-based industry going — which we could have done by now if we had kept spending mone

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          Nuclear's drawbacks are severe enough that the standard should be perfection. There should be failsafes for the failsafes for the failsafes, and no problem should ever actually result in a meltdown condition. If you can't guarantee zero meltdowns, then you simply shouldn't do nuclear, period.

          Children think in terms of back-and-white, all-or-nothing, because they can't yet deal with the complexity of the real world. Adults can balance risk and trade-offs.

          Three-mile island had a meltdown, as a result of the operators doing the wrong thing at every opportunity and creating a worst-case failure for its design. But it was a US plant built to a reasonable (for the day) safety standards. Per Wikipedia "A variety of epidemiology studies have concluded that the accident had no observable long term he

          • Three-mile island had a meltdown, as a result of the operators doing the wrong thing at every opportunity and creating a worst-case failure for its design. But it was a US plant built to a reasonable (for the day) safety standards. Per Wikipedia "A variety of epidemiology studies have concluded that the accident had no observable long term health effects."

            TMI seems to be pretty well cleaned up today, but it did necessitate an evacuation. A lot has improved since then, though, so I'm not sure how much value discussing it has.

            Nuclear in space for power generation for Earth is very silly. There's already a whopping great fusion reactor there, no need to build another.

            It depends on how close you are to the Sun. If you're no further out than, say, Mars, maybe you're right. Otherwhere, nuclear will still make sense.

        • Nuclear's drawbacks are severe enough that the standard should be perfection. There should be failsafes for the failsafes for the failsafes, and no problem should ever actually result in a meltdown condition. If you can't guarantee zero meltdowns, then you simply shouldn't do nuclear, period.

          So, historically, the two worst meltdowns in history caused fewer fatalities than died in traffic accidents today in the USA.

          Now, the question seems to be "why must nuclear power be held to a standard that is orders of

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The plant site is mostly stable now, it will just take decades and trillions of yen to decommission. The big problem is that the decontamination of the surrounding area is still failing.

      They have been trying to decontaminate the area since 2011. They tried things like removing the top layer of soil, removing vegetation, removing old buildings, and washing. Some areas have been decontaminated 5 times now and still have hot spots over the legal limits.

      At this point it's too late to save those communities. Too

      • Maybe...

        The decommissioning is the part that will go on for generations, the legal and political fall out will eventually fall into obscurity.

        Moving the spent fuel is emblematic of the struggle to make the reactor sites inherently safe, to make them less likely to again damage the environment around them. In this it makes sense to move this material to safer sites that are not compromised.

        The "clean up" of the surrounding area is one that only time will really accomplish. Sure, they will find and remo

    • "Atomic Accidents: A History of Nuclear Meltdowns and Disasters: From the Ozark Mountains to Fukushima" by James Mahaffey is another enlightening source on what and why goes and could go wrong.

  • Just to be clear, this is just cleaning up [part of] the mess that was lying around before the disaster. This is making absolutely zero progress on the actual cleanup, it's just cleaning up things that should have been cleaned up long ago.

    Spent fuel rods lying around in pools is proof positive that nuclear is bullshit.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Spent fuel rods lying around in pools is proof positive that nuclear is bullshit.

      What are you going on about? Spent fuel is particularly dangerous for the first 5 years or so after it goes idle. The best possible place for it is untouched in an idle reactor: no chance for an accident in transport, even transport within the site. After it sits for 5 years or so, it's just industrial waste: to be handled responsibly but nothing special.

  • The Fukishima cleanup cost 187 billion Dollars and counting.

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