Dismantling Fukushima: The World's Toughest Demolition Project
http://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/nuclear/dismantling-fukushima-the-worlds-toughest-demolition-project
Dismantling Fukushima: The World's Toughest Demolition Project
Taking apart the shattered power station and its three melted nuclear cores will require advanced robotics
By Eliza Strickland
Posted 28 Feb 2014
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Stability is a relative concept: Although conditions at Fukushima Daiichi arent getting worse, the plant is an ongoing disaster scene. The damaged reactor cores continue to glow with infernal heat, so plant employees must keep spraying them with water to cool them and prevent another meltdown. But the pressure vessels and containment vessels are riddled with holes, and those leaks allow radioactive water to stream into basements. TEPCO is struggling to capture that water and to contain it by erecting endless storage tanks. The reactors are kept in check only by ceaseless vigilance.
TEPCOs job isnt just to deal with the immediate threat. To placate the furious Japanese public, the company must clean up the site and try to remove every trace of the facility from the landscape. The ruin is a constant reminder of technological and managerial failure on the grand scale, and it requires a proportionally grand gesture of repentance. TEPCO officials have admitted frankly that they dont yet know how to accomplish the tasks on their 40-year road map, a detailed plan for decommissioning the plants six reactors. But they know one thing: Much of the work will be done by an army of advanced robots, which Japans biggest technology companies are now rushing to invent and build.
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