Just
WHO can say that an dose to cesium is ? In combination with all the
other radiation that Japanese are exposed to?
According to Helen Caldicott ingested radiation is the most dangerous to human health.
Radioactive
cesium found in Japan’s fish, seawater
Harmless
traces of radioactive cesium have been discovered in fish and
seawater in several areas of Japan, as the country continues to
debate whether their fish is safe to consume and anti-nuke protests
grow in the wake of the Fukushima disaster.
RT,
5
August, 2012
Japan’s
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)
stated that radioactive cesium, presumably from the crippled
Fukushima I nuclear plant, was found in seawater and fish in several
regions of the country, Russian news agency Itar-Tass reported from
Tokyo.
The
aquatic radiation was detected in central Japan (Shizuoka
Prefecture), the western part of central Honshu (Niigata) and the
country’s northeast (Iwate).
The
concentrations of radioactive particles are very small, and pose no
health risks to humans, MEXT said. The ministry believes that cesium
may have traveled to the area in rainfall.
Radioactive
cesium is a human-made radioactive isotope produced through the
nuclear fission of the element cesium. It has a half-life of 30
years, making it extremely toxic.
Earlier
this year, low levels of radioactive cesium were found in fish just
off Japan’s east coast, which was believed to have originated from
the Fukushima plant.
The
Ministry continues to closely monitor and verify traces of radiation
in seawater and fish following the 2011 nuclear disaster at the
Fukushima-Daiichi complex.
How safe is Japan’s fish and seafood?
Many
countries restricted their food imports from Japan in the wake of the
catastrophe. India suspended food imports from Japan for three months
in April 2011, fearing radioactive contamination. The EU imposed
tighter radiation controls on its imports of food and animal feed
from Japan.
The
full extent of the spread of radioactive contamination in Japan
remains unclear. The discovery of radioactive Japanese fish and
seawater could further damage Japan's flagging seafood industry.
Reports
of contaminated seafood are worrisome for the country, since
contaminated seawater and fish move in uncontrollable and untraceable
paths.
Low
levels of nuclear radiation from the Fukushima disaster were detected
in bluefin tuna off the California
coast in May of this year, suggesting
that fish are carrying the contaminants across the Pacific Ocean
faster than wind or water. US researchers carried out a study showing
the tuna were responsible for transporting radionuclides from the
2011 Fukushima disaster across the entire North Pacific Ocean.
Many
question whether fish from the Pacific Ocean and Japan’s coastal
waters are safe to eat in the wake of the Fukushima disaster.
Japanese officials and many scientists say they are, but the data on
radiation levels in Japan’s fish stock tells a different story.
Radiation
levels are high in many species that Japan has exported to Canada in
recent years, such as cod, sole, halibut, landlocked kokanee, carp,
trout and eel. And radiation levels in certain species are higher
this year than in 2011, Vancouver’s Straight.com reports.
The
highest levels of cesium in fish were detected in March, a year after
the accident, when a landlocked masu salmon caught in a Japanese
river was found to have 18,700 Becquerel of cesium per kilogram, or
187 times Japan’s legal limit for radiation in seafood. (A
Becquerel is a unit of radioactivity equal in which one nucleus
decays per second).
Tim
Takaro, an associate professor at Simon Fraser University, now avoids
eating fish from Japan: “I
would find another source for fish if I thought it was from that
area,” he
told Straight.com. “There
are way too many questions and not enough answers to say everything
is fine.” Takaro
is a member of the Canadian anti-nuclear group Physicians for Global
Survival.
The
Fukushima tragedy has shattered Japanese faith in the country’s
decades-long reliance on nuclear energy, with several
large anti-nuclear demonstrations taking
place in the country in recent months.
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