Enformable |
Posted: 29 Aug 2014 06:11 AM
PDT
At the crippled Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear power plant, workers accidentally dropped a large piece of
debris into the Unit 3 spent fuel pool on Friday, a little after noon.
The workers were carrying out
operations to remove debris with a large remote controlled crane. At
the time of the accident, workers were manipulating the control console for
the refueling machine, a piece of equipment that weighs almost a thousand
pounds.
Tokyo Electric, who is in
charge of cleanup operations at Fukushima Daiichi, told reporters that they
have not detected any change in radiation levels around the spent fuel pool
after the accident.
TEPCO is working to check the
566 spent fuel assemblies in the Unit 3 spent fuel pool to see if any of
them have been damaged by the most recent accident. According to
decommissioning plans, the utility is scheduled to start removing spent fuel
rods from the Unit 3 spent fuel pool in the first half of 2015 at the
earliest.
This is not the first time that
debris and large objects have been accidentally dropped, pulled, or pushed
into the Unit 3 spent fuel pool. Between 2012 and 2013, TEPCO workers
used the remote control cranes to remove debris from atop the Unit 3 reactor
building, and multiple instances were recorded where operators moving cranes
via remote control knocked debris into the spent fuel pool or
dislodged other materials on the roof.
In February 2013, workers accidentally knocked the 1.5 ton
fuel handling machine mast into the Unit 3 spent fuel pool, and it was later
found to have come to rest on top of the spent fuel racks after it narrowly
avoided damaging the liner of the spent fuel pool.
The post Workers drop
refueling crane console into Fukushima Daiichi Reactor 3 spent fuel pool
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