IAEA team samples seawater near Fukushima plant to ensure safe release
of wastewater
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[October 07, 2024]
By MARI YAMAGUCHI
TOKYO (AP) — A team of scientists from the International Atomic Energy
Agency arrived in Fukushima on Monday as part of an annual monitoring
and sampling mission to ensure safety of the discharge of treated
radioactive wastewater into the sea, officials said.
Japan began discharging the wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant in August 2023. The plant was damaged in the 2011
earthquake and tsunami, triggering meltdowns in its three reactors and
large amounts of radioactive water to accumulate.
China protested and blocked imports of Japanese seafood, which has hit
Japanese seafood exporters
The IAEA team will take samples from the plant, coastal waters and a
fish market in nearby Iwaki city. It will also visit to a national
laboratory near Tokyo and meet with Japanese officials.
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In late September, Japan and China
announced a deal that would ease China's seafood ban and include
Beijing in the monitoring of the wastewater discharges under the
framework of the IAEA.
The latest IAEA mission, which included experts from China, is not
related to the China-Japan deal, officials said.
Japan says the discharge meets international safety standards and is
being monitored by the IAEA. Japan has criticized China over its
seafood ban as unscientific and demanded an immediate end to the
measure.
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