“Fukushima
contamination data wrong, may be 1,000% of levels reported by gov’t
and Tepco — 60 billion becquerels of strontium and cesium claimed
to be flowing to ‘outer ocean’ each day”
---ENENews
ANALYSIS:
Contaminated water flowing into ocean despite Abe's claim
Water
contaminated with radiation is flowing out into the Pacific Ocean
from a harbor at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant despite assurances
from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that it has been "completely
blocked."
20
September, 2013
Abe
on Sept. 19 based his assertion on measurements taken in the outer
ocean.
But
experts said levels of seaborne radioactive substances stay mostly
below detection limits in the outer ocean because the substances have
simply become diluted.
The
government has estimated that 300 tons of radioactive groundwater is
leaking every day into the plant's harbor. The harbor has an opening
to the outer ocean through which 20 percent of the seawater within is
believed to be replaced by seawater from the outer ocean during one
cycle of high and low tides.
Michio
Aoyama, a senior researcher of marine chemistry at the Japan
Meteorological Agency's Meteorological Research Institute, estimated
that 30 billion becquerels of radioactive cesium and another 30
billion becquerels of radioactive strontium continue to leak into the
outer ocean every day.
Radioactive
materials decay with time at fixed rates, but available monitoring
data have shown no decline in their levels.
A
daily input of 60 billion becquerels is required to make that happen,
Aoyama said.
Radioactive
cesium and strontium continue to be detected within the harbor. They
are believed to derive from the highly radioactive water that leaked
through underground pits in April and May 2011 after the water was
used to cool melted nuclear fuel during the early stages of the
nuclear accident that began in March 2011.
To
deal with the situation, Tokyo Electric Power Co. installed
0.5-millimeter-thick polyester barriers, which it calls "silt
fences," in the harbor in April 2011 to suppress seawater
traffic. But the barriers cannot totally block the movement of
radioactive substances because water and fine mud particles can
penetrate the silt fences through grids of minuscule holes, each 0.02
to 0.03 millimeter in size.
TEPCO,
the Fukushima prefectural government, the Environment Ministry, the
Nuclear Regulation Authority and other organizations have been
monitoring radioactivity levels in seawater and the seabed at 200 to
300 sites, most of them within a 20-kilometer radius of the crippled
nuclear plant. But the methods of those measurements have been called
into question.
Experts
pointed out a lack of consistency in the sampling and analysis
methods during a Sept. 13 meeting of an NRA panel tasked with ocean
monitoring.
"Measurements
could vary tenfold at the same site," one expert said.
"The
analysis methods are outdated," said another.
NRA
Commissioner Kayoko Nakamura said she will take measures to improve
the situation.
"Data
should be taken accurately and reliably," Nakamura said.
The
NRA plans to begin monitoring seabed soil in an area that stretches
20 km east of the nuclear plant and 50 km from north to south. The
plan will make use of equipment developed by University of Tokyo
researchers that is attached to a wire and lowered from a ship onto
the seabed to measure radioactive cesium levels in soil as the ship
moves along.
The
NRA plans to monitor 600,000 sites at 1-meter intervals and put
together the results before the current fiscal year ends in March.
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