Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant on Thursday activated an underground "wall of ice" built around the reactors, to help contain spills of contaminated water into the Pacific Ocean.
The system comprises underground pipes that will freeze the ground and create a physical barrier around the four units that were damaged by the earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011, a spokesperson of the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) told EFE news.
The installation of the system, the cost of which was estimated at $307 million, took two years and while TEPCO presented the project in 2013, Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) had not approved it till now as it was analysing the safety of the project.
On Wednesday, the NRA greenlighted the first phase of the "wall of ice", which flanks the Fukushima Daiichi plant, overlooking the sea on the west.
The second phase of the system will extend to the north and southern parts of the plant, covering approximately 95 percent of its total perimeter, explained the spokesperson.
The operation of the first segment of the ice barrier will take about a month and a half and will ensure water from the underground aquifers does not get inside the buildings, housing the reactors, and mix with polluted refrigerant.
The goal is to reduce the amount of radioactive water that accumulates in the basements of the buildings and prevent its leakage into the Pacific Ocean.
Once the ice barrier is operational, the amount of water that seeps daily into the nuclear plant will be reduced from approximately 200 tonnes to around 50 tonnes, according to TEPCO.
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