Tokyo (CNN) -- Japan's nuclear watchdog on Wednesday said a toxic water leak at the tsunami-damaged Fukushima Daiichi power plant has been classified as a level 3 "serious incident" on an international scale.
The Nuclear Regulation
Authority (NRA) said it had made the decision after consulting with the
Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, said Juntaro Yamada, a
spokesman for the regulator.
As news emerged last week
of the leak of hundreds of tons of radioactive water from a storage
tank, the NRA said it was planning to issue the alert, its gravest
warning since the massive 2011 earthquake and tsunami that sent three
reactors at the plant into meltdown.
The leak had previously
been assigned a level 1 "anomaly rating" on the International Nuclear
and Radiological Event Scale, which ranges from zero, for no safety
threat, to seven, for a major accident like the meltdowns.
The decision to issue the level 3 alert came two days after a Japanese government minister had
Toshimitsu Motegi, the
industry minister, said Monday after visiting the plant that "from now
on, the government is going to step forward." His ministry has been
tasked by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to come up with measures to tackle
the mounting problems at Fukushima Daiichi.
Huge volumes of toxic water
The plant operator, Tokyo
Electric Power Company (Tepco), has been struggling to deal with the
high volume of contaminated water at the plant.
Last month, Tepco
admitted that radioactive groundwater was leaking into the Pacific Ocean
from the site, bypassing an underground barrier built to seal in the
water.
About 400 tons of
groundwater flow into the site each day, and Tepco also pumps large
amounts water through the buildings to keep the crippled reactors cool.
The operator has stored
hundreds of thousands of tons of the contaminated water in huge tanks at
the site. There are now about 1,000 of the containers, 93% of which are
already full of radioactive water.
Around 350 of the tanks
were built as temporary storage units in the aftermath of the meltdowns.
But more than two years later, they are still being used.
It was one of those makeshift tanks where the leak was detected, setting off the latest crisis.
Tepco says it has
transferred the remaining tainted water from the faulty tank to another
container. But it hasn't said what caused the leak in the first place.
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