Fukushima
Forever
Charles
Perrow, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Yale University
20
September, 2013
Recent
disclosures of tons of radioactive
water
from the damaged Fukushima reactors spilling into the ocean are just
the latest evidence of the continuing incompetence of the Japanese
utility, TEPCO. The announcement that the Japanese government will
step in is also not reassuring since it was the Japanese government
that failed to regulate the utility for decades. But, bad as it is,
the current contamination of the ocean should be the least of our
worries. The radioactive poisons are expected to form a plume that
will be carried by currents to coast of North America. But the
effects will be small, adding an unfortunate bit to our background
radiation. Fish swimming through the plume will be affected, but we
can avoid eating them.
Much
more serious is the danger that the spent fuel rod pool at the top of
the nuclear plant number four will collapse in a storm or an
earthquake, or in a failed attempt to carefully remove each of the
1,535 rods and safely transport them to the common storage pool 50
meters away. Conditions in the unit 4 pool, 100 feet from the ground,
are perilous, and if any two of the rods touch it could cause a
nuclear reaction that would be uncontrollable. The radiation emitted
from all these rods, if they are not continually cool and kept
separate, would require the evacuation of surrounding areas including
Tokyo. Because of the radiation at the site the 6,375 rods in the
common storage pool could not be continuously cooled; they would
fission and all of humanity will be threatened, for thousands of
years.
Fukushima
is just the latest episode in a dangerous dance with radiation that
has been going on for 68 years. Since the atomic bombing of Nagasaki
and Hiroshima in 1945 we have repeatedly let loose plutonium and
other radioactive substances on our planet, and authorities have
repeatedly denied or trivialized their dangers. The authorities
include national governments (the U.S., Japan, the Soviet Union/
Russia, England, France and Germany); the worldwide nuclear power
industry; and some scientists both in and outside of these
governments and the nuclear power industry. Denials and
trivialization have continued with Fukushima. (Documentation of the
following observations can be found in my piece in the Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists, upon which this article is based.) (Perrow
2013)
In
1945, shortly after the bombing of two Japanese cities, the New
York Times
headline read: "Survey Rules Out Nagasaki Dangers"; soon
after the 2011 Fukushima disaster it read "Experts Foresee No
Detectable Health Impact from Fukushima Radiation." In between
these two we had experts reassuring us about the nuclear bomb tests,
plutonium plant disasters at Windscale in northern England and
Chelyabinsk in the Ural Mountains, and the nuclear power plant
accidents at Three Mile Island in the United States and Chernobyl in
what is now Ukraine, as well as the normal operation of nuclear power
plants.
Initially
the U.S. Government denied that low-level radiation experienced by
thousands of Japanese people in and near the two cities was
dangerous. In 1953, the newly formed Atomic Energy Commission
insisted that low-level exposure to radiation "can be continued
indefinitely without any detectable bodily change." Biologists
and other scientists took exception to this, and a 1956 report by the
National Academy of Scientists, examining data from Japan and from
residents of the Marshall Islands exposed to nuclear test fallout,
successfully established that all radiation was harmful. The Atomic
Energy Commission then promoted a statistical or population approach
that minimized the danger: the damage would be so small that it would
hardly be detectable in a large population and could be due to any
number of other causes. Nevertheless, the Radiation Research
Foundation detected it in 1,900 excess deaths among the Japanese
exposed to the two bombs. (The Department of Homeland Security
estimated only 430 cancer deaths).
Besides
the uproar about the worldwide fallout from testing nuclear weapons,
another problem with nuclear fission soon emerged: a fire in a
British plant making plutonium for nuclear weapons sent radioactive
material over a large area of Cumbria, resulting in an estimated 240
premature cancer deaths, though the link is still disputed. The event
was not made public and no evacuations were ordered. Also kept
secret, for over 25 years, was a much larger explosion and fire, also
in 1957, at the Chelyabinsk nuclear weapons processing plant in the
eastern Ural Mountains of the Soviet Union. One estimate is that
272,000 people were irradiated; lakes and streams were contaminated;
7,500 people were evacuated; and some areas still are uninhabitable.
The CIA knew of it immediately, but they too kept it secret. If a
plutonium plant could do that much damage it would be a powerful
argument for not building nuclear weapons.
Powerful
arguments were needed, due to the fallout from the fallout from bombs
and tests. Peaceful use became the mantra. Project Plowshares,
initiated in 1958, conducted 27 "peaceful nuclear explosions"
from 1961 until the costs as well as public pressure from unforeseen
consequences ended the program in 1975. The Chairman of the Atomic
Energy Commission indicated Plowshares' close relationship to the
increasing opposition to nuclear weapons, saying that peaceful
applications of nuclear explosives would "create a climate of
world opinion that is more favorable to weapons development and
tests" (emphasis supplied). A Pentagon official was equally
blunt, saying in 1953, "The atomic bomb will be accepted far
more readily if at the same time atomic energy is being used for
constructive ends." The minutes of a National Security Council
in 1953 spoke of destroying the taboo associated with nuclear weapons
and "dissipating" the feeling that we could not use an
A-bomb.
More
useful than peaceful nuclear explosions were nuclear power plants,
which would produce the plutonium necessary for atomic weapons as
well as legitimating them. Nuclear power plants, the daughter of the
weapons program -- actually its "bad seed" --f was born and
soon saw first fruit with the1979 Three Mile Island accident.
Increases in cancer were found but the Columbia University study
declared that the level of radiation from TMI was too low to have
caused them, and the "stress" hypothesis made its first
appearance as the explanation for rises in cancer. Another university
study disputed this, arguing that radiation caused the increase, and
since a victim suit was involved, it went to a Federal judge who
ruled in favor of stress. A third, larger study found "slight"
increases in cancer mortality and increased risk breast and other
cancers, but found "no consistent evidence" of a
"significant impact." Indeed, it would be hard to find such
an impact when so many other things can cause cancer, and it is so
widespread. Indeed, since stress can cause it, there is ample
ambiguity that can be mobilized to defend nuclear power plants.
Ambiguity
was mobilized by the Soviet Union after the 1987 Chernobyl disaster.
Medical studies by Russian scientists were suppressed, and doctors
were told not to use the designation of leukemia in health reports.
Only after a few years had elapsed did any serious studies
acknowledge that the radiation was serious. The Soviet Union
forcefully argued that the large drops in life expectancy in the
affected areas were due to not just stress, but lifestyle changes.
The International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA), charged with both
promoting nuclear power and helping make it safe, agreed, and
mentioned such things as obesity, smoking, and even unprotected sex,
arguing that the affected population should not be treated as
"victims" but as "survivors." The count of
premature deaths has varied widely, ranging from 4,000 in the
contaminated areas of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia from UN agencies,
while Greenpeace puts it at 200,000. We also have the controversial
worldwide estimate of 985,000 from Russian scientists with access to
thousands of publications from the affected regions.
Even
when nuclear power plants are running normally they are expected to
release some radiation, but so little as to be harmless. Numerous
studies have now challenged that. When eight U.S. nuclear plants in
the U.S. were closed in 1987 they provided the opportunity for a
field test. Two years later strontium-90 levels in local milk
declined sharply, as did birth defects and death rates of infants
within 40 miles of the plants. A 2007 study of all German nuclear
power plants saw childhood leukemia for children living less than 3
miles from the plants more than double, but the researchers held that
the plants could not cause it because their radiation levels were so
low. Similar results were found for a French study, with a similar
conclusion; it could not be low-level radiation, though they had no
other explanation. A meta-study published in 2007 of 136 reactor
sites in seven countries, extended to include children up to age 9,
found childhood leukemia increases of 14 percent to 21 percent.
Epidemiological
studies of children and adults living near the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear plant will face the same obstacles as earlier studies. About
40 percent of the aging population of Japan will die of some form of
cancer; how can one be sure it was not caused by one of the multiple
other causes? It took decades for the effects of the atomic bombs and
Chernobyl to clearly emblazon the word "CANCER" on these
events. Almost all scientists finally agree that the dose effects are
linear, that is, any radiation added to natural background radiation,
even low-levels of radiation, is harmful. But how harmful?
University
professors have declared that the health effects of Fukushima are
"negligible," will cause "close to no deaths,"
and that much of the damage was "really psychological."
Extensive and expensive follow-up on citizens from the Fukushima
area, the experts say, is not worth it. There is doubt a direct link
will ever be definitively made, one expert said. The head of the U.S.
National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, said:
"There's no opportunity for conducting epidemiological studies
that have any chance of success....The doses are just too low."
We have heard this in 1945, at TMi, at Chernobyl, and for normally
running power plants. It is surprising that respected scientists
refuse to make another test of such an important null hypothesis:
that there are no discernible effects of low-level radiation.
Not
surprisingly, a nuclear power trade group announced shortly after the
March, 2011 meltdown at Fukushima (the meltdown started with the
earthquake, well before the tsunami hit), that "no health
effects are expected" as a result of the events. UN agencies
agree with them and the U.S. Council. The leading UN organization on
the effects of radiation concluded "Radiation exposure following
the nuclear accident at Fukushima-Daiichi did not cause any immediate
health effects. It is unlikely to be able to attribute any health
effects in the future among the general public and the vast majority
of workers." The World Health Organization stated that while
people in the United States receive about 6.5 millisieverts per year
from sources including background radiation and medical procedures,
only two Japanese communities had effective dose rates of 10 to 50
millisieverts, a bit more than normal.
However,
other data contradict the WHO and other UN agencies. The Japanese
science and technology ministry (MEXT) indicated that a child in one
community would have an exposure 100 times the natural background
radiation in Japan, rather than a bit more than normal. A hospital
reported that more than half of the 527 children examined six months
after the disaster had internal exposure to cesium-137, an isotope
that poses great risk to human health. A French radiological
institute found ambient dose rates 20 to 40 times that of background
radiation and in the most contaminated areas the rates were even 10
times those elevated dose rates. The Institute predicts and excess
cancer rate of 2 percent in the first year alone. Experts not
associated with the nuclear industry or the UN agencies currently
have estimated from 1,000 to 3,000 cancer deaths. Nearly two years
after the disaster the WHO was still declaring that any increase in
human disease "is likely to remain below detectable levels."
(It is worth noting that the WHO still only releases reports on
radiation impacts in consultation with the International Atomic
Energy Agency.)
In
March 2013, the Fukushima Prefecture Health Management Survey
reported examining 133,000 children using new, highly sensitive
ultrasound equipment. The survey found that 41 percent of the
children examined had cysts of up to 2 centimeters in size and lumps
measuring up to 5 millimeters on their thyroid glands, presumably
from inhaled and ingested radioactive iodine. However, as we might
expect from our chronicle, the survey found no cause for alarm
because the cysts and lumps were too small to warrant further
examination. The defense ministry also conducted an ultrasound
examination of children from three other prefectures distant from
Fukushima and found somewhat higher percentages of small cysts and
lumps, adding to the argument that radiation was not the cause. But
others point out that radiation effects would not be expected to be
limited to what is designated as the contaminated area; that these
cysts and lumps, signs of possible thyroid cancer, have appeared
alarmingly soon after exposure; that they should be followed up since
it takes a few years for cancer to show up and thyroid cancer is rare
in children; and that a control group far from Japan should be tested
with the same ultrasound technics.
The
denial that Fukushima has any significant health impacts echoes the
denials of the atomic bomb effects in 1945; the secrecy surrounding
Windscale and Chelyabinsk; the studies suggesting that the fallout
from Three Mile Island was, in fact, serious; and the multiple
denials regarding Chernobyl (that it happened, that it was serious,
and that it is still serious).
As
of June, 2013, according to a report in The
Japan Times,
12 of 175,499 children tested had tested positive for possible
thyroid cancer, and 15 more were deemed at high risk of developing
the disease. For a disease that is rare, this is high number.
Meanwhile, the U.S. government is still trying to get us to ignore
the bad seed. June 2012, the U.S. Department of Energy granted $1.7
million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to address the
"difficulties in gaining the broad social acceptance" of
nuclear power.
Perrow,
Charles. 2013. "Nuclear denial: From Hiroshima to Nagasaki."
Bulletin
of Atomic Scientists
69(5):56-67.
I think its time we find Jesus and grab an umbrella
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ReplyDeleteI find it interesting that people use the phrases "accident" which is ridiculous because it was predicted before the plant was built and if it is predictable it is not an accident and the "incompetent TEPCO" when it was and is a GE plant it was sold to them by the US (FORCED ON THEM IS MORE THE TRUTH)and the fact is that any "incompetence" in nuclear is built in because using nuclear is incompetent.
ReplyDeleteNuclear power generators and nuclear warheads; including chemical and biological weapons are the common enemy of both mankind and the environment. We cannot survive with these inhumane outrageous violations to the human rights of the entire world's peoples...and so the only acceptable response is to have them all decommissioned and outlawed universally!
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