Japan to resume trial removal of Fukushima nuclear debris: reports

According to reports released Friday, the operator of Japan’s damaged Fukushima nuclear facility will resume an operation to remove a sample of highly radioactive material next week after halting the project due to a technical issue.

The most difficult aspect of decommissioning the former power plant, which was struck by a devastating tsunami in 2011, is still removing the estimated 880 tonnes of highly radioactive fuel and debris that are within.

Engineers started putting in an extended device last month in an attempt to extract a tiny sample because the radioactivity levels inside are much too high for anyone to enter.

However, operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) had to halt the procedure after noticing that remote cameras on the apparatus were not beaming back images to the control centre.

TEPCO on Friday said it would resume the removal on Monday after replacing the cameras with new ones, the Asahi Shimbun daily and other local media reported.

TEPCO officials could not immediately be reached to confirm the reports.

Three of Fukushima’s six reactors went into meltdown after a tsunami triggered by Japan’s biggest earthquake on record swamped the facility in one of the world’s worst atomic accidents.

Japan last year began releasing into the Pacific Ocean some of the 540 Olympic swimming pools’ worth of reactor cooling water amassed since the catastrophe.

China and Russia banned Japanese seafood imports as a result although Tokyo insists the discharge is safe, a view backed by the UN atomic agency.

Beijing last month said it would “gradually resume” importing seafood from Japan after imposing the blanket ban.

In a TEPCO initiative to promote food from the Fukushima area, swanky London department store Harrods began selling peaches grown in the region last month.

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