The latest leak was found over the weekend at a connecting pipe. The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co said it suspects there may also have been leaks from three storage tanks, because high radioactivity was detected near them. The levels were not considered deadly.
Nuclear Regulation Authority Chairman Shunichi Tanaka told a Tokyo news conference that the small leak and possible other leaks have added to concerns about the plant's stability. They follow a major leak two weeks ago. TEPCO reported a loss of 300 tons of radiation-contaminated water from a steel tank on August 19, saying most of it is believed to have seeped underground but some might have escaped into the sea. The company has yet to determine the cause or exactly where the water went.
The latest leaks have triggered further concerns about the plant's ability to manage the contaminated water. Experts have said that radiation-contaminated water leaking from underground and utility tunnels connected to reactors and turbine buildings has been leaking into the sea for some time.
Tanaka said he believed the discoveries of the subsequent leak and signs of possible leaks were the result of closer inspections after the leak two weeks ago. That leak was the worst from a tank at the plant, where three reactors melted down following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami. Tanaka raised concerns about the safety of the foundations of the tank sites. TEPCO recently revealed that one of the tank sites had partially sunk during a test to see if the tank was watertight.
TEPCO said the minor leak found Saturday had stopped after workers tightened bolts on the seam of a connecting pipe. Radioactive water inside the suspected tanks was to be moved to nearby tanks as a precaution.