World | Tepco Fukushima Fishermen: No, You Can't Dump That Water Tokyo Electric sought permission to pump radioactive groundwater to ocean By John Johnson Posted May 14, 2013 7:01 PM CDT Copied In this file photo, TEPCO exec Naomi Hirose, front left, bows in front of National Federation of fisheries cooperative official Ikuhiro Hattori, front right, and his delegation. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) The Tokyo Electric Power Co. went before Fukushima fishermen yesterday and asked permission to start pumping "low-level" radioactive water into the ocean where they fish. And the fishermen said, um, no. This was a surprise, apparently, with a report in the Asahi Shimbun stating that TEPCO "officials underestimated Fukushima fishermen’s anger and distrust toward the company whose failures continue to threaten their livelihoods." Union leaders were apparently on board with the plan, but rank-and-file fishermen wouldn't hear of it, arguing that no matter how safe TEPCO says the procedure is, news of the move would further torpedo their sales. TEPCO will keep negotiating even as it scrambles to store the 400 tons of contaminated groundwater being produced at the former nuclear plant each day. About 280,000 tons of tainted water is sitting in tanks now, and that's expected to double in a few years if no alternative is found, reports Japan Today. Read These Next Beyonce leaves national anthem unfinished. Musk says his new party is in business. See the best BBQ cities in the US. A space capsule carrying ashes of 160 people crashed in the ocean. Report an error