The IAEA Director General, Rafael Mariano Grossi, has visited Japan this week as part of his ongoing commitment to monitor the discharge of treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
Mr Grossi also met with government leaders in Tokyo and local stakeholder and youth groups in Fukushima.
This is the Director General’s first trip to Japan since the water discharge began. Last July, he met with the Prime Minister in Tokyo to hand over the IAEA’s comprehensive review of Japan’s plan to release the water and visited the planned discharge point.
Mr Grossi explained: “The IAEA said, and I said, that we would be monitoring the controlled discharge of the treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant before, during and after the operation. The IAEA is here and we will continue to be here until the very last drop.”
In August, Japan began discharging the treated water and IAEA expert analysis of the four batches released since then have confirmed the tritium concentration levels are far below Japan’s operational limits.
At the power plant, Mr Grossi visited the vertical shaft of the discharge system, where the treated water, already diluted with seawater, travels to the sea for the controlled release.