CT 2025

Exchange

Tax

Cars

Kishida to visit Fukushima plant on Sunday before water release decision


Kishida

 – Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said he will visit the Fukushima nuclear plant on Sunday ahead of a final decision on when to begin releasing wastewater from the wrecked facility into the Pacific Ocean.

“The government is at the final stage of when it has to make a decision,” Kishida said on Friday in the US following a trilateral meeting with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and President Joe Biden.

He declined to say when the water release will begin during the briefing, which was aired by public broadcaster NHK.

Read More: At Camp David, US, South Korea and Japan condemn China, agree to deepen military ties

Japan plans to release into the ocean 500 Olympic-size swimming pools worth of water from the plant wrecked by a tsunami on March 11, 2011.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) last month greenlit the release of radioactive water that Japan says it can no longer store on site, but Tokyo held off on doing so ahead of the meeting in Washington to avoid stirring political opposition in South Korea to Yoon, sources earlier told Reuters

On Friday the three countries agreed to deepen military ties to counter China’s growing influence in East Asia.

The plan to pump more than a million tons of treated water into the Pacific from the nuclear plant owned by Tokyo Electric Power Company 9501.T (Tepco) has been criticized by Beijing, which has banned some seafood imports from Japan. It is also opposed by some citizens’ groups in JapanSouth Korea and elsewhere.

Japan it will remove most radioactive elements from the water except for tritium, a hydrogen isotope that must be diluted because it is difficult to filter.

You May Also Like