TEPCO just issued their monthly progress report against their roadmap.
Here:
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110617e1.pdf
and here
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110617e2.pdf
Progress by countermeasures
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110617e3.pdf
And photos with the report (23 pages of them)
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110617e4.pdf
There are always unanticipated snags in any cleanup project. You can't really know the full extent of the damage until you have completed a large portion of the project. Cleaning up Daiichi is no different.
A quick read of the monthly progress report reminds me that:
1. Water control-TEPCO has accomplished a lot in this regard.
WATER IN THE OCEAN
It is only 2 months since they found highly contaminated water leaking into the sea. Since then, 2 leaks have been found and stopped, other potential leaks have been prevented by stopping holes up with concrete. Severe contamination has been limited to the inner harbor by the installation of silt fences, and they've set up a decontamination plant for that area. Contamination with cesium and iodine in the inner harbor outside the silt fence are of the order of 0.025 to 0.01 becquerels per cm[SUP]3[/SUP] However, even inside the silt fence, current concentrations are now about 1 to 2.5 becquerels per cm[SUP]3[/SUP]. In fact, TEPCO has gone to reporting all water values as becquerels per liter (which you get by reporting the becquerels per centimeter value by 1,000. It is not that long ago that contamination inside the fence was 1,000,000 becquerels per cm[SUP]3[/SUP].
On the negative side, since May, significant strontium has been found in one area behind the silt fence (a previous sample showed only a small amount of strontium). Their seawater decontamination system may need to be beefed up to do a better job of cesium and strontium removal.
Outside the harbor, the natural order of radioactive decay and dispersion by ocean currents have cleaned the seawater up. Materials have sunk to the sea bottom, but the good thing about oceans is that things get buried by sedimentation rather rapidly. However, I think that a lot of fish testing will need to be done for some time.
WATER ON LAND
On land a great deal of contamination of everything else has been limited by completely dousing everything with water from every side. On the negative side, it has left a lot of contaminated water, currently "stored" in buildings.
However, TEPCO has set up successfully two different decontamination plants, and they are only going to miss their June 15th target for having them up and running by a couple days. They have currently 13,000 ton capacity of tanks are installed, 40,000 more tons of capacity will be installed in the next month, with 20,000 tons of capacity slated for the following month. The plan is to lower the contamination level of the water in the plants by passing it through the decontamination facility, injecting some of it back into the reactors for cooling, and storing the rest in tanks.
Getting recirculation going at the 4 spent fuel pools and 3 reactors is key to getting water under control, and this has not been going as well.
LAND CLEAN UP
We don't see this as much, since it is not a glitzy technical achievement, particularly, but photos of the site now look a lot more tidy. To begin with, there were no tidy spots to take a photo of. In fact, a lot of debris had to be removed just to set up the tanks and pipes, and gain entry to the reactor buildings. A huge amount of debris, much of it highly radioactive, has been cleaned up and stored in containers, a lot of it using robot trucks. The endless spraying of dust fixative has limited further contamination in the air and water, and kept it confined to the site.
AIR
As a result, the amount of radioactive dust in the air is significantly lower than it was. And overall, radiation at the site boundaries has dropped from a range of 11 to 203 microSieverts per hour on April 15th to a range of from 5 to 121 microSieverts per hour on June 15th. At the main building from 530 microSieverts per hour on April 15th to 354 microSieverts per hour on June 15th. Some of the decline is, of course, due to normal radioactive decay, but some of it is due to limiting further release of radioactive materials, control of dust, and general cleanup.
SPENT FUEL POOLS
Proof of concept by cooling spent fuel pools with external heat exchangers has been demonstrated. Unit 2's spent fuel pool is now cooled that way, and was brought down to temperature much faster than expected.
Unit 1 and Unit 3: Water is being injected through the original piping there for stable cooling, but work is hindered on getting the heat exchanger installed due to the highly radioactive conditions inside the reactors. We now have learned that Unit 4's pool never went dry (good news for the later cleanup), however the piping has been damaged so that it cannot be used. TEPCO says that it will have water injected by piping for stable cooling by July at Unit 4.
REACTORS
Nitrogen Injection to prevent further hydrogen explosions
This is still only in place at Unit 1. However, entry and some interior air mitigation has been done at Units 2 & 3, and TEPCO says that they will be able to get this going at Units 2 and 3 in the next month. On the plus side, no further hydrogen explosions have occurred (despite at least 2 fake videos that have hit the internet in the last month. You can tell this stuff is not true, because the radiation metering, both on site and off site would show a spike if there had been any extra dispersion of nuclear material into the air.)
General Cooling:
Units 1 & 2 are relatively cool and stable at this time. Unit 3 is hotter, but cooling.
Heat exchanger cooling:
The piping work is under way. Redesign of the system to accommodate the collapse of the fuel was done. There still is just a lot of work needed in this area, including a lot of environmental work on the reactor buildings so that workers can work there. Without heat exchanger cooling, still more radioactive water will have to be accommodated. This is the most behind schedule of any item.
Water flooding. Not started. Building work outside has begun.
Gauge fixing:
Unit 1 not has a functional pressure gauge. Some of the other instrumentation has been slowly getting fixed.
Covering the buildings
This is moving along. The frames are being built, the laser measurements for the frames is complete.
Patching holes in the reactors.
Huge concrete pumps should be arriving soon.
Additionally:
1. A huge and quite involved website is being updated daily, of all reactor parametric measurements, press releases, press handouts, site maps, radiation measurements & chemical analysis in air, sea, subsurface drains, and soil in several languages. A live video streaming camera of Daiichi is available on the site too. It's amazing how much this has grown and improved from something that was like any electrical company's rather perfunctory website. Many ocean monitoring stations were set up, and routinely measured and analyzed at 3 different depths. It's really nice. The one addition that I would like to see is better reporting on strontium contamination.
2. Extra rest areas and a doctor's office has been set up (the government helped with the doctors' office) More doctors have been deployed. Over 2500 workers have been given testing and whole body scans. (The government helped getting extra machines). Dosimeters have been acquired for everyone (this was something that should have been there at the beginning, but wasn't, for contract workers).
3. A continual barrage of governmental demands for additional paperwork is being handled.
4. And where improvement is in my opinion needed, payout operations for damages to evacuees, and helping the evacuees. Payout, and a payout office and phone number has been established, but I just think they should be doing more, and especially more to get towns checked out and cleaned up so that people can return.
However, I cannot help but compare & contrast the work TEPCO is doing with what BP did and didn't do in the Gulf of Mexico last year, with the Deep Water Horizon Oil Spill.
On April 20, 2010, the rig exploded, killing 11 people. (no people have been killed by the Daiichi reactors)
The leak was not stopped until July 15th. (Significant leaking here was stopped within 6 weeks. BP took 3 months)
Oil Crap is still floating around in the ocean.
There was no numerical tracking being done of how much oil was spilled and where it was going. That had to be done by other agencies.
Payment has still not been made to many of those who were damaged, and many claims are in court.
The cleanup onshore is not complete yet, and may never be, and all of it is being done by local volunteers