The second batch of Fukushima nuclear polluted water is about 7,800 tons.

  Beijing, Sept. 25 (Xinhua)-According to Japanese media reports, the Japanese government and Tokyo Electric Power Company plan to start the second batch of Fukushima nuclear polluted water discharge at the end of September or early October.

  According to reports, the Japanese government and TEPCO plan to inspect the sewage equipment again, and then formally decide the discharge date on September 28th.

  The emission is almost the same as that of the first batch, which is still about 7800 tons.

  According to the report, the first batch of nuclear polluted water was discharged from August 24 to September 11, with a discharge of 7788 tons.

  According to the plan, in 2023, Japan will discharge 31,200 tons of nuclear polluted water in four times. According to statistics, 1.3 million tons of nuclear polluted water had been stored before the official sewage discharge began. It will take at least 30 years to discharge all the nuclear polluted water.

  In response to the Fukushima nuclear pollution water discharge, the voices of opposition and questioning in Japan and abroad are still continuing.

  Hokkaido Hakodate City Council passed a submission on September 20th, saying that the discharge of nuclear polluted water was forced by Japanese Prime Minister kishida fumio despite the opposition of fishermen and other groups, and demanded that the Japanese government immediately stop the discharge.

  According to the latest poll conducted by Fukushima Min Bao, 61% of the people in Fukushima believe that the Japanese government and TEPCO have not fully explained the discharge of nuclear polluted water, and 66% of the people are very concerned about the impact of nuclear polluted water discharge on Fukushima aquatic products.

  On the afternoon of September 2, South Korea’s largest opposition party, the Common Democratic Party, the Basic Income Party, the Progressive Party and other opposition parties and more than 90 civic groups, once again held a large-scale rally in the center of Seoul to condemn the discharge of nuclear polluted water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan.

  The Fisheries Agency of the Russian Federation issued a statement on September 7, saying that safeguarding national health is the primary task of Russia’s domestic food market, and will continue to strengthen monitoring on the ecological and fishery impact of Fukushima nuclear polluted water on Russia’s exclusive economic zone.

  China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin advised Japan to face up to the concerns of neighboring countries and the international community on September 1st, immediately stop transferring the risk of nuclear pollution to the world, and don’t stand on the opposite side of the whole international community, otherwise it will bear long-term moral and legal responsibilities.