Thursday, July 14, 2011

Update on Fukushima: AREVA/Veolia system successfully treating contaminated water

Update on Fukushima: AREVA/Veolia system successfully treating contaminated water

The decontamination system co-developed by AREVA and Veolia Water* for the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant has just reached the milestone of 18,000 tons of highly-radioactive water treated to-date, representing 15% of the accumulated volume.
Installed on the Fukushima site that was severely damaged following an earthquake and tsunami that hit the North-East of Japan in March, the system was designed, constructed, and launched in a record-short time (2 months) and is an essential element to stabilize the situation of the nuclear plants. It will improve the access of workers to strategic parts of the site, and allow TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) to re-circulate the water used for cooling the reactors.
Constructed and commissioned by AREVA and Veolia experts, the system reduces the water radioactivity level by a factor of 10,000 and can treat up to 50 tons of contaminated water per hour. These technologies have a proven track record in AREVA’s La Hague and Marcoule facilities and across hundreds of Veolia Water projects in the world.
All together, over 200 AREVA and 60 Veolia experts from France, Germany, the United States, Japan and Sweden were mobilized non-stop on this project.
For more information, check out NPR’s profile on ‘Fukushima Workers Tackle Highly Radioactive Water.’

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