Zürcher Nachrichten - IAEA wraps up first trip to monitor Fukushima water release

EUR -
AED 3.820696
AFN 72.953265
ALL 98.439951
AMD 412.105482
ANG 1.871688
AOA 948.661263
ARS 1068.320861
AUD 1.67256
AWG 1.872357
AZN 1.762918
BAM 1.954013
BBD 2.096882
BDT 124.106473
BGN 1.956628
BHD 0.392384
BIF 3070.990786
BMD 1.040198
BND 1.411209
BOB 7.176435
BRL 6.400369
BSD 1.03855
BTN 88.402133
BWP 14.423806
BYN 3.398691
BYR 20387.890009
BZD 2.089788
CAD 1.498448
CDF 2985.369369
CHF 0.936839
CLF 0.037297
CLP 1029.151645
CNY 7.592365
CNH 7.597974
COP 4549.869715
CRC 527.317632
CUC 1.040198
CUP 27.565259
CVE 110.164226
CZK 25.122845
DJF 184.864051
DKK 7.460231
DOP 63.26213
DZD 140.666056
EGP 52.920928
ERN 15.602977
ETB 132.23204
FJD 2.411856
FKP 0.823818
GBP 0.831909
GEL 2.923091
GGP 0.823818
GHS 15.266035
GIP 0.823818
GMD 74.894167
GNF 8975.789323
GTQ 7.999682
GYD 217.28124
HKD 8.080106
HNL 26.386862
HRK 7.461246
HTG 135.79578
HUF 411.057825
IDR 16860.472978
ILS 3.80917
IMP 0.823818
INR 88.687581
IQD 1360.455512
IRR 43779.348737
ISK 145.106178
JEP 0.823818
JMD 161.811981
JOD 0.737817
JPY 164.295702
KES 134.226915
KGS 90.497538
KHR 4174.181633
KMF 484.862496
KPW 936.178041
KRW 1525.196228
KWD 0.320568
KYD 0.865508
KZT 538.017844
LAK 22712.223806
LBP 93001.026544
LKR 306.080011
LRD 189.017095
LSL 19.310935
LTL 3.071435
LVL 0.629206
LYD 5.098336
MAD 10.47312
MDL 19.161472
MGA 4898.519039
MKD 61.555089
MMK 3378.524054
MNT 3534.594265
MOP 8.3082
MRU 41.458076
MUR 48.952031
MVR 16.016649
MWK 1800.852655
MXN 20.952817
MYR 4.648677
MZN 66.472561
NAD 19.310935
NGN 1604.069579
NIO 38.215042
NOK 11.82662
NPR 141.443613
NZD 1.849197
OMR 0.400518
PAB 1.03855
PEN 3.867262
PGK 4.215144
PHP 60.277458
PKR 289.128817
PLN 4.264274
PYG 8099.590832
QAR 3.777145
RON 4.974644
RSD 117.049715
RUB 103.982345
RWF 1448.774721
SAR 3.905321
SBD 8.720561
SCR 14.830134
SDG 625.677925
SEK 11.530142
SGD 1.414425
SHP 0.823818
SLE 23.713303
SLL 21812.444964
SOS 593.557039
SRD 36.467273
STD 21530.008174
SVC 9.087687
SYP 2613.530115
SZL 19.319327
THB 35.54722
TJS 11.361607
TMT 3.651097
TND 3.311471
TOP 2.436254
TRY 36.550489
TTD 7.057544
TWD 34.077737
TZS 2518.496323
UAH 43.545966
UGX 3801.522526
USD 1.040198
UYU 46.227713
UZS 13407.735164
VES 53.65063
VND 26457.448081
VUV 123.494446
WST 2.873847
XAF 655.357506
XAG 0.03486
XAU 0.000395
XCD 2.811189
XDR 0.796272
XOF 655.357506
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.439699
ZAR 19.634667
ZMK 9363.034498
ZMW 28.741708
ZWL 334.943483
  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    7.25

    0%

  • RBGPF

    -0.7000

    59.8

    -1.17%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.64

    -0.55%

  • AZN

    0.3250

    66.625

    +0.49%

  • RELX

    0.0140

    45.904

    +0.03%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    58.91

    +0.08%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    34.09

    +0.18%

  • BTI

    0.2250

    36.485

    +0.62%

  • BCC

    -0.9200

    122.27

    -0.75%

  • VOD

    0.0150

    8.445

    +0.18%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.26

    +0.9%

  • RIO

    0.0100

    59.21

    +0.02%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    23.03

    +0.56%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    11.77

    +0.34%

  • CMSD

    -0.1600

    23.49

    -0.68%

  • BP

    0.2100

    29

    +0.72%

IAEA wraps up first trip to monitor Fukushima water release
IAEA wraps up first trip to monitor Fukushima water release

IAEA wraps up first trip to monitor Fukushima water release

The International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday it made "significant progress" on its first mission to review the planned release of treated water from Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant.

Text size:

Since Monday, an IAEA taskforce has been in Japan to assess the country's plan to gradually release the water, which has been processed to remove most radioactive elements, into the ocean.

The organisation's deputy director general Lydie Evrard said the international team including non-IAEA experts had examined early preparations at the site for the release, expected to begin as soon as March next year.

"The IAEA taskforce made significant progress in its work this week to get a better understanding of Japan's operational and regulatory plans for the discharge of the treated water," she told reporters.

More than a million tonnes of liquid, including rain, groundwater and water used for cooling, has accumulated in tanks at the crippled Fukushima plant since it went into meltdown after a tsunami in 2011, and space is running out.

The IAEA has already endorsed the release, which it says is similar to wastewater disposal at nuclear plants elsewhere.

But neighbouring countries have expressed environmental and safety concerns, and local fishing communities are opposed, fearing it will undermine years of work to restore their reputation.

The water is treated but some radioactive elements including tritium remain. Experts say there is no evidence that would pose any danger, but opponents want the plan blocked.

Evrard said the taskforce collected water samples and gathered technical information on the trip and will release its findings in late April, the first of several reports in a multi-year review.

Ahead of the press conference on Friday, Greenpeace said it had "low expectations" for the taskforce's investigation, calling for alternative options to the release to be explored.

"The IAEA is incapable of protecting the environment, human health or human rights from radiation risks -- that's not its job," Shaun Burnie, senior nuclear specialist for Greenpeace East Asia, said in a statement.

Evrard said the UN-affiliated organisation is listening to concerns over the plans and takes them "very seriously", and the review was "aimed at providing an objective and science-based approach".

N.Fischer--NZN