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Japan's TEPCO stops preparations to eliminate nuclear particles from Fukushima plant

Japan's Tokyo Electric Power has suspended preparation work for the test removal of nuclear fuel debris from the tsunamistricken Fukushima Daiichi plant, a business spokesperson said.

The preparatory work was suspended due to an error in the installation of the extraction equipment and it is unclear when the work, the first of its kind since the accident in 2011, might resume, he included.

The work was at first planned to begin in 2021, however was pushed back due to hold-ups brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the spokesperson.

The particles, which include nuclear fuel and parts of the plant's facilities, is approximated to weigh around 880 tons and is still radioactive, stated public broadcaster NHK which first reported the news on Thursday.

The trial removal of nuclear fuel particles is the most important phase of the decommissioning process, so it is required to continue with incredibly securely, NHK priced estimate TEPCO's. President Tomoaki Kobayakawa as stating on Thursday.

Last August, TEPCO started

to release treated radioactive water

from the Fukushima plant, part of the decomissioning. process, which resulted in

a restriction

of Japanese seafood imports by China, Japan's leading seafood. purchaser at a time.

Russia has followed China to ban seafood imports from. Japan over safety issues that Tokyo has said are. scientifically unjustified.

(source: Reuters)