Radioactive
Water Leaking From Fukushima: Why Millions Of Lives Are At Stake
17
August, 2013
In
lieu of the Japanese government doing the right thing and finally
coming clean about the epic environmental catastrophe that is
Fukushima, which it hopes to simply dig under the rug even as the
inconvenient reality gets worse and thousands of tons of radioactive
water make their way into the ocean, one is forced to rely on
third-party sources for information on this tragedy. We present a
useful primer from Scientific American on Fukushima "water
retention" problem and "what you need to know about the
radioactive water
leaking from Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific
Ocean."
Scientists
on both sides of the Pacific have measured changing levels of
radioactivity in fish and other ocean life since the March
2011 earthquake and tsunami triggered
a nuclear
meltdown at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
On Aug. 2, 2013, when Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) gave
its first estimate of how much radioactive water from the nuclear
plant has flowed into the ocean since the disaster, the company was
finally facing up to what scientists have recognized for years.
"As
an oceanographer looking at the reactor, we've known this since
2011," said Ken Buesseler, a marine chemist at the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institute in Woods Hole, Mass. "The news is TEPCO
is finally admitting this."
TEPCO
estimated that between 20 trillion and 40 trillion becquerels (units
of radioactivity representing decay per second) of radioactive
tritium have leaked into the ocean since the disaster, according to
the Japanese newspaper Asahi
Shimbun.
The Fukushima plant is still leaking about 300 tons of radioactive
water into the ocean every day, according to Japanese government
officials. [Infographic:
Inside Japan's Nuclear Reactors]
Japan
is haunted by two lingering questions from this aftermath of the
disaster: First, how the radioactivity
might seriously contaminate ocean life that
represents a source of seafood for humans; second, whether it can
stop the leaks of radioactive water from the Fukushima plant.
Radioactivity
is not created equal
The
Fukushima plant is leaking much less contaminated water today
compared with the immediate aftermath of the nuclear meltdown in June
2011 — a period when scientists measured 5,000 to 15,000 trillion
becquerels of radioactive substances reaching the ocean. Even if
radioactivity levels in the groundwater have spiked recently, as
reported by Japanese news sources, Buesseler expects the overall
amount to remain lower than during the June 2011 period.
"The
amount of increase is still much smaller today than it was in 2011,"
Buesseler told LiveScience. "I'm not as concerned about the
immediate health threat of human exposure, but I am worried about
contamination of marine life in the long run."
The
biggest threat in the contaminated water that flowed directly from
Fukushima's reactors into the sea in June 2011 was huge quantities of
the radionuclide
called cesium.
But the danger has changed over time as groundwater became the main
source for leaks into the ocean. Soil can naturally absorb the cesium
in groundwater, but other radionuclides, such as strontium and
tritium, flow more freely through the soil into the ocean. (TEPCO is
still coming up with estimates for how much strontium has reached the
ocean.)
Tritium
represents the lowest radioactive threat to ocean life and humans
compared with cesium and strontium. Cesium’s radioactive energy is
greater than tritium, but both it and tritium flow in and out of
human and fish bodies relatively quickly. By
comparison, strontium poses
a greater danger because it replaces the calcium in bones and stays
for much longer in the body.
Not
fishing for trouble
:
A
number of fish species caught off the coast of the Fukushima
Prefecture in 2011 and 2012 had levels
of cesium contamination greater
than Japan's regulatory limit for seafood (100 becquerels per
kilogram), but both U.S. and Japanese scientists have also reported a
significant drop in overall cesium contamination of ocean life since
the fall of 2011. The biggest contamination risks came from
bottom-dwelling fish near the Fukushima site.
The
radioactive groundwater leaks could still become worse in the future
if TEPCO does not contain the problem, U.S. scientists say. But they
cautioned against drawing firm conclusions about the latest impacts
on ocean life until new peer-reviewed studies come out.
"For
fish that are harvested 100 miles [160 kilometers] out to sea, I
doubt it’d be a problem," said Nicholas Fisher, a marine
biologist at Stony Brook University in Stony Brook, N.Y. "But in
the region, yes, it's possible there could be sufficient
contamination of local seafood so it'd be unwise to eat that
seafood."
The
overall contamination of ocean life by the Fukushima meltdown still
remains very low compared with the effects of naturally occurring
radioactivity and leftover contamination from U.S. and Soviet nuclear
weapons testing in the 1960s. Fisher said he’d be "shocked"
if the ongoing leaks of contaminated water had a significant impact
on the ocean ecosystems.
Source
of radioactive water
TEPCO
is facing two huge issues in stopping the radioactive water leaks.
First, groundwater from nearby mountains is becoming contaminated as
it flows through the flooded basements of the Fukushima
plant's reactor buildings.
The water empties into the nuclear plant's man-made harbor at a rate
of about 400 tons per day — and TEPCO has struggled to keep the
water from leaking beyond existing barriers into the ocean.
"This
water issue is going to be their biggest challenge for a long time,"
said Dale Klein, former head of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. "It was a challenge for the U.S. during Three Mile
Island [a partial nuclear meltdown in Pennsylvania on March 28,
1979], and this one is much more challenging."
Second,
TEPCO must also deal with contaminated water from underground tunnels
and pits that hold cables and pipes for the Fukushima nuclear plant’s
emergency systems. The underground areas became flooded with highly
radioactive water during the initial meltdown of the Fukushima
plant’s reactors, and have since leaked water into the ocean
despite TEPCO’s efforts to seal off the tunnels and pits.
TEPCO
has also been racing to deal with the problem of storing hundreds of
thousands of tons of radioactive water from the Fukushima plant, said
Hiroaki Koide, a nuclear engineer at Kyoto University in Japan. The
Japanese utility is testing a water decontamination system called
ALPS that can remove almost all radioactive substances except for
tritium, but has put much of the contaminated water in storage tanks
in the meantime.
"The
tanks are an emergency solution that is not suitable for long-time
storage," Koide said. "Water
will leak from any tank, and if that happens, it will merge with
the groundwater."
What
must be done
So
what solutions exist beyond building more storage tanks? Klein
reviewed a number of possible solutions with TEPCO when he was picked
to head an independent advisory committee investigating the Fukushima
nuclear accident.
One
possible solution involves using refrigerants to freeze the ground
around the Fukushima plant and create a barrier that stops the inflow
of groundwater from the mountains. TEPCO is also considering a plan
to inject a gel-like material into the ground that hardens into an
artificial barrier similar to concrete, so that it can stop the
contaminated groundwater from flowing into the ocean.
Such
barriers could help hold the line while TEPCO pumped out the water,
treated it with purification systems such as ALPS, and then figured
out how to finally dispose of the decontaminated water.
"My
priority would be stop the leak from the tunnel immediately,"
Klein said. "Number two would be to come up with a plan to stop
the inflow and infiltration of groundwater. Number three is to come
up with an integrated systematic water treatment plan."
Meanwhile,
both Japanese and U.S. scientists continue to gather fresh scientific
data on how the radioactivity impacts ocean life. Despite low
contamination levels overall, studies have shown great differences in
certain species depending on where they live and feed in the ocean.
"The
most straightforward thing the Japanese can do now is measure
the radionuclides
in fish tissue,
both at the bottom of the ocean and up in the water column at
different distances from the release of contaminated groundwater,"
Fisher said.
There's
more: RT interviews fallout researcher Christina Consolo, who says
that if Japan continues on its course of doing nothing, then years
of "duct tape fixes" could result in millions of death.
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