The
release will last for about 17 days starting Thursday, during
which some 7,800 cubic metres of wastewater will be released
into the Pacific Ocean.
Nuclear authorities, including the United Nations nuclear
watchdog, have said the plan will have a negligible impact on
humans and the environment, but it has still angered some
neighbors, especially China.
The initial release of the water in late August triggered a
blanket ban on Japanese seafood products by China and a deluge
of harassment calls to businesses and offices, believed to
originate from China.
Junichi Matsumoto, who is overseeing the water release at Tepco,
said on Wednesday during a news conference that Tepco had
received more than 6,000 calls from abroad between August 24-27.
Many appeared to originate from China, but Tepco did not track
the exact number of such calls.
Japan started the water discharge in August in a key step
towards decommissioning the Fukushima plant, which suffered
meltdowns after being hit by a tsunami in 2011 in the world's
worst nuclear plant disaster since Chernobyl 25 years earlier.
Japan says the water is treated to remove most radioactive
elements except tritium, a hydrogen isotope that must be diluted
because it is difficult to filter.
Tritium levels in the surrounding waters since the initial
discharge have met pre-determined standards, according to tests
conducted by Tepco, and no issues have been identified with the
first water release, Matsumoto said.
(Reporting by Sakura Murakami. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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