en.Wedoany.com Reported - Japan's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant completed a new round of treated water discharge into the ocean at 12:03 p.m. on June 20. This is the second discharge in fiscal year 2026 and the 20th since the discharge began. The originally scheduled progress of this discharge was affected by an interruption of approximately 30 hours midway, ultimately completing one day later than planned.
From the event itself, the completion of the discharge indicates that Tokyo Electric Power Company's long-term disposal of accumulated treated water following the Fukushima nuclear accident continues to advance. Due to the lengthy decommissioning period of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, the treated water discharge is not a one-time action but is implemented in multiple batches. Therefore, the timing and stability of each round of discharge will continue to attract ongoing attention both domestically and internationally in Japan.
During this discharge process, an interruption of approximately 30 hours occurred. Although operations subsequently resumed and the discharge was completed, it once again highlights the reliance of the treated water discharge operation on equipment management, monitoring mechanisms, and information disclosure. For the surrounding fishing industry, coastal residents, and neighboring countries and regions, whether the discharge meets safety standards depends not only on data released by the Japanese side but also on external oversight and continuous transparent information disclosure.
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