TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan started releasing treated radioactive water from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean on Thursday, marking a milestone in a long and difficult decommissioning process.
Here is a timeline of key events related to the accident in Fukushima and the subsequent clean-up.
2011:
March 11: A 9.0 magnitude quake off the coast of northeast Japan triggers a devastating tsunami that swamps back-up power and cooling systems at Tokyo Electric Power Co’s (TEPCO) Fukushima Daiichi plant, eventually causing meltdowns at three of six reactors. Government declares a nuclear emergency.
March 12: TEPCO begins injecting seawater to cool the reactors’ fuel rods.
April 4: Engineers release more than 10,000 tonnes of contaminated water – about 100 times more radioactive than legal limits – that had been used to cool overheated fuel rods after running out of storage capacity.
Dec. 16: Japan says damaged reactors are in stable state of “cold shutdown”.
2013:
July 22: TEPCO says radioactive water has continued to leak from the plant into groundwater, making it radioactive, with implications for drinking water and for the Pacific Ocean.
2014:
April 1: Residents begin to return to the 20-km (12-mile) exclusion zone around Fukushima as decontamination of the area is completed.
June 3: TEPCO begins work on an “ice wall” to slow the flow of ground water into the wrecked plant, but the build-up of contaminated water continues, slowing recovery efforts.
2018:
Oct. 1: TEPCO says water treated at the Fukushima site still contains radioactive materials, and apologises to the government after previously insisting the materials had been removed. About a million tonnes of water are now stored at the plant, enough to fill about 500 Olympic swimming pools.
Nov. 13: The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says Japan must urgently tackle the build-up of contaminated water.
April 13: Japan says it has decided to release the water into the sea, drawing ire from China, which calls the move “extremely irresponsible”, as well as South Korea, which summons the Japanese ambassador. Local fishermen also opposed the plan.
2021:
Dec. 28: Japan maps out plan for the water release that includes compensation standards for local industry and compilation of a safety report.
July 4: Japan wins approval for the water release from the IAEA, the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog, following a two-year review. IAEA says its plans are consistent with global safety standards and would have “negligible radiological impact” on people and the environment.
(Reporting by Tokyo bureau; Editing by David Dolan and Clarence Fernandez)