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A view of locally caught seafood at the Hamanoeki Fish Market and Food Court in Soma, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, 31 August 2023.
Locally caught seafood at the Hamanoeki fish market in Soma, Fukushima. Japan is set to release a second batch of wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plant despite objections from China and others. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
Locally caught seafood at the Hamanoeki fish market in Soma, Fukushima. Japan is set to release a second batch of wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plant despite objections from China and others. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

Japan to release second batch of wastewater from Fukushima nuclear plant next week

This article is more than 6 months old

UN-approved release to go ahead despite China’s ban on all Japanese sea imports following first batch

Japan will begin releasing a second batch of wastewater from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant from next week, its operator has said, an exercise that angered China and others when it began in August.

On 24 August, Japan began discharging into the Pacific some of the 1.34m tonnes of wastewater that has collected since a tsunami crippled the facility in 2011.

“The inspections following the first release have been completed … The (second) discharge will start on 5 October,” Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said on Thursday.

China banned all Japanese seafood imports after the first release, which ended on 11 September, despite Tokyo’s insistence that the operation poses no risk.

Russia, whose relations with Japan are also frosty, is reportedly considering following suit on a seafood ban.

In the first phase about 7,800 tonnes of water were released into the Pacific out of a planned total of 1.34m tonnes, equivalent to more than 500 Olympic swimming pools.

Tepco says that the water has been filtered of all radioactive elements except tritium, which is within safe levels. That view is backed by the UN atomic agency.

China has accused Japan of using the ocean like a “sewer”, accusations echoed at the UN last week by prime minister Manasseh Sogavare of Solomon Islands, who has developed close relations with Beijing.

The release, which is expected to take decades to complete, is aimed at making space to eventually begin removing the highly dangerous radioactive fuel and rubble from the wrecked reactors.

“As was the case for the first discharge, we will continue to monitor the tritium levels. We will continue to inform the public in ways that are easy to understand based on scientific evidence,” Tepco official Akira Ono told reporters Thursday.

Despite China’s ban on Japanese seafood imports, Chinese boats are reportedly continuing to catch fish off Japan in the same areas that Japanese vessels operate.

Rahm Emanuel, the US ambassador to Japan, last week posted photos of what he said were Chinese fishing boats off Japan on 15 September.

“They say a picture is worth a thousand words. Chinese vessels fishing off Japan’s coast on 15 September, post China’s seafood embargo from the same waters,” Emanuel said on social media platform X.

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