Fukushima
and the Transnationality of Radioactive Nuclear Contamination.
“Visualizing Radiactivity” and its Impacts on Humanity
An
initial offer of zeolite absorbent from Rosatom, the Russian nuclear
power corporation, in the first few months after the explosions,
repeated in August 2013, was rebuffed by TEPCO, presumably to favour
its arrangement with AREVA.10 However, unless significant
amounts of forested land is cleared and prepared at the site,
contaminated water and soil storage is expected to reach the maximum
space available by November 2013. The adoption of the decontamination
method without planning the logistics for permanent storage
facilities at the NPP, suggests that eventual discharge of
contaminated water into the ocean or air has been and remains
anticipated by TEPCO.11
Notes
Jacob
Broinowski
14
October, 2013
When
Fukushima 1 Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) was torn apart by several
explosions, whether due to technical failings in correspondence with
the earthquakes, tsunami or a combination of both, it not only
dispersed radioactive contaminant but also exposed the bonds
connecting people’s lives with nuclear power
Over
the two and a half years since then, the corruption, inadequacies and
mendacities at the centre of the sovereign power structure that has
prevailed in Japan since 1945 have become ever more visible. This
essay first introduces the foundations of this structure, exploring
how the long-standing relationship between Government and major
private electric utilities in Japan informs the present crisis,
noting in particular the ramifications of decisions being made within
this structure at the individual level in present and projected
effects to human health. Following consideration of the effects of
radiation on human health, the discussion then turns to visual and
local testimonies of the effects of other radiological events –
Hanford, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Chernobyl and Iraq – so as to
offer a comparative assessment of the Fukushima disaster. While
mindful of the difficulty in arriving at an absolutely conclusive
position on these conditions, enough evidence has now accumulated to
make a realistic assessment of the human health impact, and to
discern how public understanding has been, and continues to be,
confused. Finally, given that the Fukushima disaster is
distinguishable from other radiological events in scale and type of
contamination, this essay argues that far-reaching change is
called-for in the current legal standards and institutional responses
which have been governed thus far by mid twentieth century power
relations.]
I
The Priorities of Sovereign Power
Over
nearly 70 years of the ‘postwar system’, nuclear power has
steadily become synonymous with the political order in Japan and
deeply integrated it within its international institutional frame.
Its introduction into Japan by a consortium of young politicians and
captains of industry (via the 1953-4 Eisenhower Atoms for Peace
campaign) helped to solidify bilateral political and corporate
relations between the US and Japan, within the wider geopolitical
re-formation. As part of the reconstitution of interlocking
zaibatsu-government relations from 1949 on, with the base value of a
successful democracy in ‘free Asia’ commensurate with continuous
construction and centralized energy production (or ‘plutonium
economy’) in all aspects of the nation (the signature LDP policy of
doken kokka or ‘construction state’),2 the destruction of
the natural environment was seen as a necessary contingency in the
essential practice of resource extraction, production and
construction for optimizing economic growth and containing political
tensions.
Following
the formation of the US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC 1954) and Japan
Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA 1955), the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) was established in 1957. Article 2 of its foundational
mandate referred to the promotion of ‘safe, responsible development
of uranium resources’ and the mission to ‘accelerate and enlarge
the contribution of atomic energy to peace, health and prosperity
world wide’. Just as Japan eagerly committed itself to the
‘peaceful use of nuclear power’, so too did signatory nations to
the nuclear club agree to the IAEA assuming the role of key promoter
of the nuclear industry worldwide. In 1959, the WHO agreed to
the IAEA taking primary responsibility for reporting the health
effects of nuclear radiation despite the heavy concentration of IAEA
expertise in nuclear physics (28 May 1959, WHO WHA 12-40). Along with
establishing radiation safety and environmental protection standards,
the IAEA and other radiation protection authorities have consistently
downplayed events and evidence and pathologised health concerns for
low dose radiation as ‘radiophobia’, which it characterised as
more hazardous than radiation itself. Their understanding of and
response to the ongoing disaster at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant
(NPP) is no exception.
As
a sovereign industry, controlled by powerful forces in society,
nuclear power in Japan came to influence foreign policy, national
security and transnational ties. The insouciant over-confidence
displayed by Tokyo Electric Power Company managers (TEPCO) in the
first two years of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, was an expression
of the long-held technical monopoly over nuclear power plants enjoyed
by the Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan. In a 2012
court action by Sunfield Nihonmatsu Golf Course for compensation over
losses incurred due to forced closure as a result of high radiation
levels, TEPCO argued that as a private contractor its
responsibilities to the public were limited and that it was no longer
the owner of radioactive matter released from the Fukushima Daiichi
NPP. It claimed the materials were ‘res nullius’ (mushubutsu) –
things belonging to no one, like mist or fish – and that it was
owned by those whose land upon which it fell. In this case the
radiation levels were equivalent to those in the Chernobyl exclusion
zone (Cs137 235,000 bq/kg, Sr90 98 bq/kg). On the other hand,
while apparently not of their concern, TEPCO lawyers counter-examined
the technical accuracy of government dosimetry and their
understanding of radiation effects, using the oft-cited pro-nuclear
argument that 10 mSv of natural radiation is to be found in inhabited
parts of the world with no ill health effects. Although the district
court maintained the right of companies to file complaints, they held
that the onus of decontamination rested on local and federal
governments, and absolved TEPCO of the duty to compensate the golf
company.3
Although
both TEPCO and the central Government had received adequate
forewarnings of the risk in 2008, both maintained for more than a
year after the disaster that the tsunami and earthquakes were an
‘unforeseeable force of nature’ and ‘beyond prediction’. They
refused liability for damage caused from radioactive contaminant
released beyond their respective private or national borders.
Apparently, their position is supported by The London Convention on
the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other
Matters (1972) that limits liability to radioactive waste released
into the sea from ships and not land-based sources.4 However,
the 1996 Protocol to the 1972 Convention codifies the ‘precautionary
approach’ and the ‘polluter pays’ principle. Rather than
prohibit a certain list of hazardous materials, this Protocol shifts
the Convention to include waste discharged from land as well by
stating that anything not included on the said list, of which
contaminant from nuclear reactors is not a part, cannot be discharged
into the ocean and must be managed on land. The case can be made that
precautionary measures were insufficient and that the polluter was
negligent in refusing to adequately store the materials.
In
this sense, TEPCO and the Government have operated in tandem. While
the national government took financial control of the utility,
setting up a permanent government fund of 1 trillion yen (which
includes public taxes and international donations) to protect the
utility (offset costs) from insolvency and collapse,5 TEPCO
managers continue to own and run the plant, assuming ultimate
authority on nuclear-related operational issues including human and
environmental health. A key functional problem underlying this
position is that TEPCO is bound to recoup the costs it has incurred
during the clean-up. At the same time, the Government can shift
responsibility to TEPCO for the disaster when it is expedient to do
so.
TEPCO
is a major representative of a sovereign industry, which is regarded
as too important to be allowed to collapse, existing in this sense
beyond society. While technical problems posed by engineering
operations, health safety limits, radiation detection methods, safety
procedures and financial management have dominated public discourse,
serious considerations of responsibility and ultimate causation have
been either marginalised or rejected by the courts. Protecting its
share price and profitability remains the ultimate priority of TEPCO
qua corporation, resulting in the curtailing of its disaster
operations on the basis of considerations of cost-effectiveness. This
leads to slipshod safety procedures, including random and inadequate
ocean and land-based measurements and hastily assembled and
carelessly monitored temporary storage facilities (over 1000 tanks
containing roughly 380,000 tonnes of highly contaminated water).
Even
as it has failed and failed again, however, TEPCO has been bailed out
by the Government so that it can continue to operate as a business.
Regarded as ‘too big to fail’, the corporation has been granted
immunity from either raw capitalist logic or due democratic process,
while being encouraged to manage a portfolio that promises to provide
returns in the broader effort to maintain the buoyancy of the nuclear
industry. In this sense, the reality of molten radioactive metal
sitting beneath the ruined plant is abstracted into a financial
liability that is ‘contained’ to prevent any loss of confidence
on the part of prospective investors. Neoliberal free market
principles permit state intervention where there is opportunity for
financial benefit, but otherwise adhere to strict economic
imperative. Moreover, the issues are not restricted to Japan. Since
the earliest days of the disaster, all three administrations have
proactively canvassed prospective buyers for its nuclear technology
exports. Confirmed buyers include Vietnam, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and
the UAE, while negotiations with other central European and Asian
buyers continue.6 Further, anticipating local obstruction,
Hitachi and Toshiba have acquired or are acquiring nuclear plants
overseas (UK) to expand their nuclear power operations.7
While
ceding responsibility to corporate entities such as TEPCO allows the
Government to limit its accountability, the toxicity of the materials
handled by these corporations in terms of their long-term waste and
propensity to penetrate the biosphere is far greater than the
short-term economic gain they return through their use. The
importance attributed to TEPCO as part of a transnational industry
overrides the core international principles of fair trading and
avoiding transnational pollution. The fact that adequate prior
warning or consultation is not offered to those who are or will be
affected, shows that both the state and corporation have reneged upon
their responsibility to protect the rights of the civilian. Instead,
they privilege the corporation as a sovereign asset. This sort of
corporate welfare at the expense of public health and well being
suggests the degree of interests shared by state and corporate
managers and the professional fluidity between them. This has been
further aided by a distorted scale established in the late 1950s for
weighing the dangers posed by radioactive contamination against the
political and economic benefits of nuclear power.
Despite
the seismic volatility of the archipelago, the concentrated
investment, research, planning, construction and operation of the 54
nuclear reactors in Japan by the utilities, government, and
cooperating international organisations that make up the
transnational ‘nuclear village’ and its monolithic supply chain,
suggests why radiation-related industries and agencies are being
protected from liability for damage or cost overruns.
Prime
Minister Abe’s statement in Japan on 4 September 2013, followed by
his performance as part of a final pitch to win the Olympics for
Tokyo at the IOC meeting in Buenos Aires three days later, was
intended to display decisive resolve toward the crisis. However, the
discrepancy between representation and reality could not have been
clearer. Abe assured the nation, and then the Olympic panel and an
international audience that ‘the [Fukushima] situation is under
control. It has never done and will never do any damage to Tokyo’.
He guaranteed, with a pledge of 47 billion yen (US $500 million)
toward the plant, that his government would stop the
radiation-contaminated water leaks from the Fukushima Nuclear Power
Plant (NPP) so that ‘there would be no problem at all in 2020’.
In
turn, Takeda Tsunekazu, the leader of the IOC bid claimed that life
in Tokyo where people believed that the air and water quality was
safe would continue as normal, as in most cities ‘like Paris,
London and New York’, and that ‘Fukushima’ posed no risk to a
‘great and safe Games’.8Contrary to their belief that
contaminated water had been contained within the 0.3km port housing
of the NPP, ionising radiation had been dispersed (and was continuing
to spread) throughout the Kantō area, and further into the ocean.
As
contractors continue with ‘decontamination’ projects, the
initial strategy adopted by TEPCO to cool the melted fuel with
constant hydration and filtering of contaminated water stored in
tanks (with the Advanced Liquid Processing System provided by French
nuclear technology specialist company AREVA) has been constantly
hampered by problems. It has also been the target of criticism by
Gregory Jaczko, former head of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, as
well as groups such as Greenpeace and Physicians for Social
Responsibility (PSR), for its inability to thoroughly remove
radioactive isotopes.9
II
Human requirements for safety versus economic health
Beyond
the concerns of contamination from melted radioactive fuel, public
trust in the Government has also been a casualty of the Fukushima
disaster. The Noda government (2 September 2011 – 26 December 2012)
equivocated over the plan by the Kan administration to shut down
nuclear power in Japan, and that plan was then emphatically revoked
by the Abe government from December 2012. Instead, the latter, at
least initially, vowed to export, restart and accelerate nuclear
power-related production, reverting to and consolidating the LDP
construction-state formula to boost economic growth.
The
post facto raising of safety limits for radiation exposure on 19
April 2011 (from 1 to 20mSv) and reduction of the evacuation zone to
less than 30 km from the NPP, driven by an unapologetic ‘logic’
of optimal growth, ignored the passage of radioactive concentrations
beyond the official concentric circles emanating from the crippled
plant. These were to denote the 20km mandatory exclusion zone
(greater than 50mSv) and the 30km voluntary exclusion zone
(20-50mSv).12 The continued dispersal of radioactive contaminant
from the stricken and leaking NPP, waste incineration, the relaxation
of food testing and re-circulation of irradiated fish from the
Fukushima coast (Sōma, Iwaki), and re-use of contaminated areas by
fast food chains for cheap food production, for
example,13 contributes to the creation of a surplus population
of humans and other living beings through the bioaccumulation of
radioactive materials. This means that due to institutional policies
adopted with regard to the hazard of radiation, a certain portion of
the population has been factored in as part of the ‘costs’ of
maintaining nuclear power in Japan.
As
techniques of persuasion and confusion continue to be insinuated into
public consciousness (‘Look forward with optimism!’; ‘Ganbare
Nippon!’; ‘Kizuna!’), the popular nationalist drive to restore
Japan to its glory days of the Meiji era, or to the Kishi
administrative initiatives of the late 1950s, has made claims by
affected citizens for compensated evacuation and health care more
difficult. Redoubling its effort to stamp out ‘baseless rumours’
(fūhyō), the Abe government has pressed evacuees to return to their
former residences. Despite a municipal government campaign to
encourage residents to prioritise family, community and the land (the
kizuna project), along with staged apologies, promotional drives for
Fukushima produce, distribution of free dosimetry meters to potential
returnees, decontamination and construction programs, and even
miracle cures for cancer,14 the public are also being told to
make their own decisions regarding the risks of radiation exposure.
However,
the ability of those citizens from the mandatory or voluntary
evacuation zones (160,000 in total) to make such decisions has been
handicapped by the authorities’ screening information. The same is
true for those who have remained behind. They have been deprived of
necessary detail and treatment concerning radiation levels in food,
water and air, for sufficient protection against damage from myriad
types of radionuclides.15
While
sophisticated detection of radioactive matter is obviously essential
(across the gamma-beta-alpha range in water, soil, air, organic and
inorganic matter), the over-emphasis on a national ‘can-do’
positivity and on an economic solution by the Abe government
distracts from realistic assessments and appropriate responses to the
complex problems at Fukushima. Decontamination for example, can cause
serious damage to the lived environment,16 and there is little
guarantee that mobile radioactive particles will not re-contaminate
cleaned areas. Despite the US Atomic Energy Commision (AEC) having
known since 1955 from its disastrous nuclear weapons testing in the
Marshall Islands that radioactive material does not dissipate but
moves in scattered pockets and streams in sea water,17 in 2013
the Japanese government and TEPCO continue to use a dispersal as
decontamination method, both on land and into the Pacific ocean. The
use of decontamination instead of evacuation and entombment of the
reactors, has meant the award of significant contracts to
construction companies to perform tasks whose true effectiveness are
disputed. At the same time, general confusion prevails concerning the
effects of radioactive materials, how they spread and how to protect
against them.18
The
subsequent creation of this surplus population in addition to those
affected by the initial disaster is symptomatic of a crisis of late
capitalism. In the same way that medical treatment of HIV and cancer
now favours a managerial over a curative approach which benefits the
pharmaceutical industry through long-term course prescriptions,
monitoring and decontamination programs in Fukushima tend to defer
the recognition of reality as part of the prescription. Similarly,
the chronic illness caused by low-level radiation exposure leaves the
person alive but in a permanently debilitated state.
The
concerted attempt to assuage public anxiety seems to be aimed at
gradually normalising radiation as part of everyday life – studied
or transformed into industrial production in some way, but not
accurately diagnosed and sufficiently treated. As the sovereign
appetite for power increases in lieu of trans-national market
competition, projected external threats and national policy
transformation, stress fractures in the social and environmental
fabric are developing of which the Fukushima disaster is just one
example. As people ingest radioactive materials (hot metal particles)
dispersed from the reactors as a by-product of a stressed sovereign
industry, their health has been and is being sacrificed in exchange
for the protection and expansion of sovereign life.
III
An outline of radiation effects
While
the public are being served variants of misinformation concerning
radiation, from the universal common of natural background radiation
for the creation of planetary life, to comparative doses of radiation
in aircraft, X-rays, CAT scans and bananas (natural background
potassium K40 radiation in bananas is 0.0117 Bq/kg) to psychosocial
prescriptions of happiness (Dr Yamashita Shunichi, Fukushima Medical
University), it is generally agreed that, prior to 1945, the human
body had evolved to correct mutations from natural radiation exposure
over time. Anthropogenic radioactive materials however, which have
been produced by nuclear bombs or power plants cannot be balanced so
easily, whether internally or externally exposed to the human body.
When man-made uranium products enter the food chain, depending on the
radionuclide the additional and unnatural burden of radioactive
ionisation takes a long time to stabilise in the environment
(generally 100,000 years).
Where
once it was believed that hibakusha suffered illness only from the
direct external flash and thermal wave from the atomic bombs over
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it only gradually became known that the
chroniceffects such as fatigue, cardiac abnormalities, various
cancers, leukaemias, alopecia, skin lesions and rashes were also due
to low-dose internal radiation exposures.19
The
US-led Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission (ABCC) longitudinal studies on
hibakusha, used by the Atomic Energy Commission to establish the
international formula for radiation exposure and safety standards,
calculated the risk of cancer in direct proportion to the dose
received (linear no threshold model). It concluded that any exposure
below 100mSv/year (1 mSv = 1 X-ray), particularly internal exposure,
would be negligible to human health. This calculation did not allow
distinctions for gender, age, physiological differences, diet, period
of exposure and ecological particularities in distribution.
It
also disregarded all non-cancer, non-genetic, or non-fatal illnesses
as being radiation-induced (auto-immune disease, fertility impairment
or birth defects, or combination with other carcinogens). Although
some authorities now recognize that this measurement understates risk
by between 100 and 1000 times, this model formulated by the
International Committee for Radiation Protection (ICRP) continues to
inform international radiation policy (IAEA/UNSCEAR/WHO), and has
been applied in calibrations for radiation emergencies at Windscale,
Sellafield, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fukushima, and
elsewhere.20 Even when the external dose rate is below the
stipulated action level (external dose rate limit for sheltering is
100μSvh-1), radioactive particles may still be present in the air or
water and pose risk of ingestion. In fact, on 27 May 2012, the UN
Special Rapporteur on Fukushima Anand Grover released a report which
was sharply critical of the approach taken by Japanese authorities,
and pointed out that much had been learned about low dose radiation
effects from the Chernobyl disaster.21
Although
there is evidence that the danger has been understood ever since the
early 1940s,22 in vitro and in vivo studies over the
past 20 years have confirmed that uranium products, when ingested in
micro-particles, can be genotoxic (damaging DNA), cytotoxic (damaging
cells) and mutagenic(mutation inducing) to living beings.24 They
then embed in the cells, soft tissues, organs, blood and bones, and
continue to emit regular low doses of radiation in specific areas as
they decay (ionisation). The ‘heat’ from these emissions kills
the affected cells or alters their biochemistry. This creates the
conditions for disorders and diseases, mutation/genomic instability,
and cancers and leukaemias.25 When reproductive organs are so
embedded, the damage to the sex cells therein is reproduced in the
next generation. When embedded in the soft tissue of an embryo the
activity of these products can impair birth, and cause defects
(teratogenic defects). Even when these products are excreted they
remain active and can continue to cause damage when re-absorbed by
living beings.
Despite
tight institutional control over national health statistics and
health diagnoses at medical centres in affected areas, at the time of
writing 43 children measured from Fukushima prefecture have been
diagnosed with thyroid cancer, or are suspected of it. 18 were
diagnosed with thyroid cancer from 210,000 children tested in
Fukushima, up from 12 reported on 5 June 2013, and 25 other cases are
suspected of developing into full-blown cancers.26 Although the
Fukushima Medical University has yet to release all its thyroid test
data, the Eighth Fukushima Prefecture Health Management Survey
between April and August 2012 showed 43% of 42,060 children tested
presenting abnormal nodules and enlarged cysts on their
thyroids.27 This may be an underestimate given that the tests
skimmed over small cysts (1-2mm), but is still a higher rate compared
to the same illnesses in the Chernobyl vicinity after that
disaster.28 In addition, Caesium has been detected in 70% of 85
children measured in the Ibaraki Prefecture Cooperative Association
study,29 and there have been numerous instances of symptoms
typical of radiation poisoning, such as regular, prolonged, enduring
and aggravated anaemia, rashes, lethargy, uncontrolled nose-bleeding,
dizziness, nausea and headaches.30
Conclusions
by the WHO and UNSCEAR that the releases from Fukushima were much
lower than those of Chernobyl and that there will be only a small
absolute increase in health effects seem excessively optimistic.
Firstly, the exact amount of radioactive material released from the
Fukushima NPP is unknown because the corium (melted fuel) are yet to
be located and cannot be measured, and the release of contamination
has not yet been contained. The amount of Cs 137 alone released from
the initial explosions (roughly 3.8 x 1017 Bq) warranted a Level
7 International Nuclear Event Scale (INES) code, while the estimated
amount of all radioactive materials subsequently released into the
air and sea over the following two years is 44.9 terabecqerels (TBq).
Secondly,
Government health estimates have been scaled against the entire
population.31 Given that the different metabolisms of pregnant
women, children and adults have been exposed to radioactive
contamination in excess of 250mSvy, whether accumulated or singular
doses (the Chernobyl mandatory evacuation level was 5 mSvy, the
voluntary evacuation level was 1mSvy, and the present European limit
for nuclear plant workers is 5mSvy), it seems clear that the risks
from Fukushima are being downplayed by the Government and the
IAEA-affiliated radiation protection institutions.33 From August
2013, the South Korean government responded by implementing selective
bans on fish and food products from prefectures in Tōhoku, while the
US Food and Drug Administration added new products to its import
alert list revised from July 2013 (Import Alert 99-33) and Russia’s
Rosselkhoznadzor maintained its ban of imports from selected
companies selling produce from 8 prefectures. The position adopted by
TEPCO and the Government warrants a prima facie case of criminal
negligence, and more broadly, points to the need for a review of
international law concerning transboundary pollution to more
effectively address the consequences of the Fukushima disaster and
anticipate the dangers posed by similar events in the future.
IV
Iraq, US, Japan: Hibakusha
It
is instructive to refer to other sites of mass radiation exposures as
comparators to the Fukushima disaster. For example, in 1998 and in
2003, a Japanese documentary team led by Kamanaka Hitomi visited Iraq
(Basra, Fallujah) to trace the effects of radioactive materials
dispersed during the first Gulf War of 1991 (Hibakusha: sekai no
owari ni, 2003).
The
documentary showed reports from medical doctors and affected families
from 1998 onward of spikes in infant and child leukaemias (acute
myeloid leukaemias specific to nuclear radiation) and serious birth
defects in Basra and Fallujah, and cases suspected in other
locations. They traced the source to depleted uranium munitions (DU)
used by US and UK forces in Operation Desert Storm during the first
Iraq War (1990–1991). DU is a uranium product derived from
enrichment processing of uranium ore, which concentrates the isotope
uranium 235 for use in nuclear bombs or nuclear power reactors. The
mixture of radioactive waste from this is comprised mostly of U238
(others are Thorium and Proactinium) which has a radioactive
half-life of 4.5 billion years. In both the first and second
(Operation Enduring Freedom, 2003) Iraq Wars, A-10 Warthog aircraft
and armoured ground units (Abrams tanks and Bradley Fighting
Vehicles) deployed rounds coated in solid uranium (4,500 grams),
which dispersed 300 and 500 tonnes respectively of powderised DU into
the local fields and water-ways.35
‘Approximately
2000 tonnes of DU’ – screenshot from Kamanaka Hitomi (dir.),
‘Hibakusha: Sekai no owari ni’ (Group Gendai Films, 2003)
|
Under
pressure from the UK and US governments and in contravention of its
mandate in denying the risk from DU, the WHO delayed the release of
its own commissioned report (2004) which cautions that inhalation of
dust containing DU would affect the long-term health of Iraq’s
civilian population in the form of birth defects, congenital
malformations and cancers.36 The publication of a joint
WHO-Iraqi Ministry of Health Report covering 10,800 households to
measure the rate of congenital defects in Iraq due for release in
November 2012 was also delayed, and only the first ‘provisional’
part of its three parts has so far been made public. The anonymous
authors conclude that there is no evidence for an unusually high rate
of congenital defects in Iraq.37
The former Assistant Secretary
General of the United Nations Hans von Sponeck also stated that the
‘US government restricted WHO surveys from southern Iraq where
depleted uranium had been used and caused serious health and
environmental dangers’.38
In
January and February 2012, 11 researchers visited 711 houses (4,800
individuals) in Fallujah to survey for details of cancers, birth
outcomes and infant mortality.39 The study, entitled ‘Cancer,
Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005-2009’,
concluded that anecdotal evidence of a sharp rise in cancer and
congenital birth defects was correct. Infant mortality (80 per 1,000
births) was much higher in Iraq than Egypt (19), Jordan (17) and
Kuwait (9.7). They found a 38-fold increase in leukaemia, a ten-fold
increase in female breast cancer and significant increases in
lymphoma and brain tumours in adults. They report that the types of
cancers were ‘similar to [those found] in Hiroshima survivors who
were exposed to ionising radiation from the bomb and uranium in the
fallout’, while the rate of illness was also much higher.40 Many
Iraqi women have been advised to not give birth to more children.
In
addition, several studies have found that 30% of the 800,000 US
military personnel who served in Operation Desert Storm later
developed chronic illnesses from ingested DU fragments and the
children of these veterans have also shown spikes in deformities.
Loosely termed ‘Gulf War Illness’, these effects include chronic
fatigue, cognitive impairment, autonomic dysfunction and nervous
system damage.42 As the plutonium for the Nagasaki bomb was
being produced in 1944-45 at the Hanford reactor, large plumes of
aerosolized uranium products were released (550,000 Curies). People
living near the Hanford reactor were exposed to dispersed material
through absorption over a prolonged period. From talking with one
family, Hida learned that in 1949 secret government tests (only
revealed in 1984) had found a five-fold increase in cancers in
communities near the plant and factories in Hanford and Rocky
Flats.43 This is supported by the ‘Petkau Effect’ observed
by Abram Petkau in 1972, which finds that regular low level radiation
exposure can be more damaging over time than a one-off high dose of
radiation. This was confirmed from investigations by Burlakova et al.
in the early 1990s which observed changes at the cellular level in
animals and humans after irradiation akin to the aging process.44
Given
that as early as 1941, as part of US military research into
radiological warfare (1941-1974), uranium products had been found to
be seriously harmful when ingested (dependent upon contact time,
particle solubility, half-life, rate of elimination), the results
from Hanford, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Basra and Fallujah among other
sites where uranium products have been used and dispersed suggest
criminal negligence and/or crimes against humanity through the use of
weapons of mass destruction (chemical, biological or otherwise) on
two counts: the use of such weapons against civilians or combatants;
and the degradation of the environment in the failure to protect
individual entitlement to adequate conditions of life including
health and well-being. The ecological distribution and
re-mobilisation of fine DU further afield is also of serious concern.
As those living in primary affected areas have most obviously
experienced, exposure to NPP emissions downwind or downstream also
gain heightened susceptibility to cancer and non-cancer related
illnesses.
V
Local testimonies
Dr
Hida’s thesis and the ‘downwinder’ theory may not be
far-fetched.45 Cornelia Hesse-Honneger, a Swiss scientific
artist, has over 20 years collected and drawn ‘true leaf bugs’
(Heteroptera) from around fallout areas and the peripheries of
nuclear power plants. Characterised by their remaining within their
habitat, Hesse-Honegger describes these bugs as ‘bio-indicators’
(early warnings) because they are sensitive to radiation and develop
much more rapidly than mice and humans.46Her field-work sites include
Chernobyl, Switzerland (Aargau), Sweden, France (La Hague), Germany
(Gundremmingen), Sellafield (Cumbria), Pennsylvania (Three Mile
Island) and the Nevada desert.
Left:
Soft bug (Miridae) from Gösgen, Switzerland ; Right: Scorpion fly
(Panorpis Communis) from Reuenthal, Switzerland © Cornelia
Hesse-Honegger
|
Her
research suggests that the official ‘low dose event’ category for
Chernobyl, and its estimate of 28-32 deaths from acute radiation and
15 subsequent deaths from thyroid cancer is mistaken and should be
re-calculated.47 Of the 16,000 bugs collected until 2007, she
found a 30% increase in severe deformities (missing feeler sections,
malformed wings, asymmetric body segments, ulcers, black spots,
altered pigmentation), 10 times higher than the 1-3% norm. Rather
than concentric circles used to measure the distance from the
hypocenter as in the model used for Hiroshima, she found topography,
wind direction and hydrology as determinants in radiation
distribution.
In
2000, only after thousands of scientific studies conducted in the
affected regions around Chernobyl over the 1990s did the UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan announce that radiation dispersed from Chernobyl
(100 times the amount from the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and
Nagasaki) had caused chronic illness in 7 million more people, and
the premature deaths of 3 million children.48 This contrasted
starkly with IAEA recommendations (and the consensus of
‘radioprotection authorities’) that families continue life as
normal in contaminated areas and that their illnesses were
psychosocial.
Takeda
Shimpei is one artist who has attempted to counter the prevailing
narrative and to perceive more clearly the presence of radioactive
contamination in everyday life in the Tōhoku area since the reactor
meltdowns. Fukushima-born and New York based, Takeda is familiar with
radiation issues through his previous engagements with hibakusha
legacies. In contrast to mainstream symbolic images and information
used to represent ‘3.11’, Takeda sought to make an alternative
and ‘direct record’ of the ‘worst man-made nuclear accident in
history’.
In
‘Trace’, which was initially shown at the Fukushima Biennale
2012, he collected soil samples from 12 different locations of
historical and cultural value while traveling in the Tōhoku-Kantō
area with hip-hop activist Shingo Annen and architect Keisuke Hiei
(temples, shrines, battle sites, ruins, a hospital). Takeda used an
‘auto-radiographic’ process in which he exposed the soil samples
to photo-sensitive materials in a light-sealed box over 6 months
(gelatin silver halide film). The ionising products scattered on the
soil permanently imprinted the film as decay continued. By minimising
his interference in this way, like Hesse-Honegger, Takeda has devised
an accessible way to record and display the chemical reaction
inherent to the soil’s active ingredients (mass-time-heat).
This
work also demands interpretation as a visual representation. Setting
aside purely aesthetic considerations, the concrete scientific form
of Takeda’s work is strategically aimed at exposing the politicised
conditions of life amid radioactive contamination. Takeda’s images
reflect the burning particles in the soil, which when ingested
(through air, water or food) continue to burn within the body. As
these materials continue to circulate in the biosphere, given the
deep geological time of uranium products, the danger is that through
repetition of the message that ‘all is safe’, radiation
monitoring could become like weather readings, announced and accepted
as a fact of life. In choosing not to separate and quantify the
radiation amount and particle type, Takeda seems to have rejected
reliance on radiation monitoring as an end in itself, and the
erroneous, arbitrarily determined, radiation dose limits. Alive to
the possibility that such measurements may be easily manipulated to
represent a fictitious reality, the focus of ‘Trace’ is on
manifesting radiation as undeniable materiality.
In
addition, scientific studies on animals affected by distributed
radioactive contamination in local areas in Tōhoku are also
beginning to appear. The ornithologists Timothy Mousseau and Anders
Møller, whose work on cataracts in birds in areas with high levels
of ionising radiation (10 uSvh) around Chernobyl is well known,
extended their studies to swallows surrounding the Fukushima NPP and
found that these birds have nearly vanished, while those that survive
have ‘smaller heads and low breeding rates’.49
Macaques,
horses, mice and moss show similar effects. Wild macaques, which eat
leaf buds from the surrounding forests, show high levels of Cs137 in
their muscle tissues (10,000-25,000 bq/kg March 2011; 500-1,500 bq/kg
June 2011; 2,000 bq/kg Dec-Mar 2012).50 Some have been fitted
with GPS devices and dosimeters by Fukushima University researchers
so as to collect and map levels as they comb the mountain forests in
the no-entry zone of southern Minami-Soma. Of the 15 horses born at
the Hosokawa ranch 20kms from the reactor in 2013, 14 lived between 1
week and 1 month.51 4 adult horses also collapsed and eventually
perished. The horses were diagnosed with liver failure (lack of red
blood cell production). Fieldmice in their 52nd generation since the
disaster sampled in early 2012 from a forest 30 km from the NPP1
(Kawauchi-mura forest, Ibaraki-ken) still showed genetic mutations
100 times the control and very high Cs137 levels (3100 bq), as did
earthworms, leaves and soil from the same area.52 People are
still growing rice in these areas, and are also returning to them. In
early July 2013, moss on the roof of a building in Fukushima city
50kms from the NPP returned extremely high Cs137 concentration
(1,785,216 Bq/Kg).53
In
July 2013, the groundwater flowing beneath the NPP recorded the
highest readings yet measured, a rise of 9000% since the beginning of
the disaster (900 million Bq/m3 of all βparticles- Sr, Cs, Tr,
Pu). On 22 July, one day after the LDP and New Komeito won the
national election, TEPCO operators admitted to a daily discharge of
300 tonnes of irradiated water into the sea (since upgraded to 400
tonnes),54 and the leak of an additional 24 billion Bq of
tritiated water from storage tanks into the ocean.55 Aoyama
Michio, Japan Meteorological Agency scientist, at the IAEA 2013
Scientific Forum reported 60 billion Bq of Cs137 and Sr-90 being
released directly into the Pacific ocean from the NPP on a daily
basis (900 billion Bq respectively per month). This was even greater
than a recent estimate by Kanda Jōta, an oceanographer at Tokyo
University of Marine Science and Technology, who calculated that the
NPP is leaking 0.3 Tbq (300 billion Bq) of Cs137 per month.56Aoyama
included the amount of water vacuumed from the port by Units 5 and 6
to cool the reactors, subsequently discharged north of the site.57
Contrary
to assurances from the nuclear industry, tritiated water (3H2O, or
‘heavy water’) binds to the DNA and can cause great damage to
life. There is no method yet discovered to remove Tritium once it has
bonded with water.58 In addition the total release from the
reactors into the permeated basements has been revised upward to 276
PetaBq Cs-137 (40 percent of the reactor core inventory), and
Strontium-90 from 23 to 33 PBq (4.4 to 6.3 percent of the
reactor core inventory). This is roughly triple the total amount
released into the air from the Chernobyl accident.59
Despite
all this, local government recently opened the public beach at
Iwaki-shi (40 km from the NPP) for swimming, claiming that radiation
levels are below the detectable limit (omitting the specific amounts
or types of radiation they had tested).60 This was decided
knowing of high Cs137 concentrations in seaweeds, crustaceans and
fish along the Tōhoku coast, and of TEPCO dumping of radioactive
matter into the ocean.
This
is also of concern given the known effects since 2011 on ocean
wildlife further afield, including ringed seals and walruses along
the Bering Straits, the Arctic coastlines of Russia, the Arctic
wildlife sanctuary, Alaska and British Columbia. Necroscopies of the
seals have shown fluid on the lungs, white spots on the liver, and
abnormal brain growths. Indigenous people living in British Columbia
who rely on Skeena River sockeye salmon have also reported
dramatically reduced numbers and ill-health of the fish returning
from their ocean-going maturational phase to spawn up-river. The
symptoms these animals are displaying in the form of bleeding
lesions, alopecia, psoriasis, internal growths and lethargy indicate
diseases consistent with radiation exposure which affects the
autoimmune, lymphatic and endocrine systems.
As the seals in these
areas eat the ocean-going herring, tuna, greenling and salmon, their
carcasses are then eaten by polar bears and birds.61Further, large
numbers of dead starfish have collected in the shallows and on the
beaches of Vancouver Island. On 12 September 2013, a local diver
witnessed large numbers of sunflower starfish (Pycnopodia
helianthoides), that feeds mostly on sea urchins and snails, in
various stages of disintegration on the sea floor. As he described,
‘the arms just detach, and the central disc falls apart. It seems
to happen rapidly, and not just dead animals undergoing
decomposition, … The bottom from about 20 to 50 feet [6 to 15
meters] was absolutely littered with arms, oral discs, tube feet,
gonads and gills.’62
If
estimates are correct regarding increases in caesium levels in the
entire Pacific Ocean well beyond the peak level during the nuclear
weapons tests, these are preliminary findings of degradation of the
ecosystem at a far greater scale than has been anticipated.
VI
In sum
Abstract
data is difficult to decode and easily manipulated for the untrained
reader, but the visual testimonies of radioactive contamination by
Kamanaka (Hibakusha), Hesse-Honegger (Heteroptera) and Takeda (Trace)
render visible the apparently invisible damage to the biosphere.
Testimonies of radiation-contaminated animals and plants emerging
from local residents as well as scientific studies confirm such
damage. Although context specific, these diverse cases indicate a
common experience that transcends nationality and cultural
particularity – a radioactive transnationality.
The
obfuscation of the transnational nuclear industry on questions of
radiation is presumably motivated by the sheer scale and intensive
long-term investment in the nuclear production chain (uranium mining,
nuclear power plant technology, national electricity production,
military weapons production and use, decommissioning and nuclear
waste storage) in which executives, politicians and bureaucrats are
deeply embedded.
While
funds for new military hardware, technological innovation, public
works and public relations operations seem to be readily available to
the Abe administration, it shrinks from the costs required to return
the water, food and air to a ‘safe’ legal radiation limit (1
mSvy).63 Despite being an advanced industrial nation, its
government seems incapable of taking appropriate measures to protect
people – closing all schools which measure above 1 mSvy in affected
areas, assisting all citizens that wish to be evacuated from areas
within a 80km radius from the NPP with sufficient subventions for
their moving, living and schooling costs, preventing the consumption
of contaminated foods nationally and internationally, providing a
nationalised course of medical treatment commensurate with the actual
danger posed by the toxicity of radiation exposure, and storing
radiation contaminated materials.64
Even
if they are less clear on the structural and scientific reasons for
it, many people in Japan seem to be well aware of the falsity of
Abe’s contention that the Fukushima NPP is under control.65 The
abstraction of material conditions to justify the protection of and
maintain the confidence in sovereign assets and illusory growth, is
incurring real and mounting costs in human and non-human life. If
unchecked, this system will continue to do so into the future until
exhaustion and potential collapse.66 Either way, the situation
is likely to get worse before significant change is achieved, which
depends on the ability of people in Japan and the international
community to grasp the urgency of the crisis and to demand an end to
delay in preventing further contamination of the ocean and
regenerating one of the most vital structures supporting life on the
planet. In the short-term, the formula for measuring the risk posed
by nuclear power must be re-adjusted to reflect the health of living
beings in the biosphere as a non-negotiable factor. This will have
immediate effects on public health, food safety and evacuation from
contaminated areas. In the long term, while the debate over the
choice of energy sources is critical, the systemic and astigmatic
prioritisation of profit has to be revised, so that state-corporate
interests can no longer hijack the core values which sustain life.
Adam
Broinowski is an Australian Research Council post-doctoral research
fellow at Culture, History and Language, College of Asia and the
Pacific, the Australian National University. His book Cultural
Responses to Occupation in Japan: The Performing Body during and
after the Cold War is forthcoming in 2014. His current research is
concerned with understandings of radioactive contamination since
1945.
Notes
1 An
initial version of this article entitled ‘Limits in the Modern
Episteme: Understanding Fukushima through visualising radioactivity’
was presented at the Japanese Studies Association of Australia
conference in July 2013.
2 See
Gavan McCormack, The emptiness of Japanese affluence, New York: M.E.
Sharpe, 2001; and Jeff Kingston, Japan’s quiet transformation:
social change and civil society in 21st Century Japan, London and New
York: Routlegecurzon, 2004, pp. 122-156.
3 The
proprietor sued TEPCO for losses as the contamination led to its
closure (45 kms from the Fukushima NPP). The TEPCO lawyers
(Nagashima, Ohno and Tsunematsu) argued that they could not be held
liable for that which was not their property. The court upheld the
defence. The court also stated that golf course operations could be
resumed because radiation levels on average were below 3.8 uSv/h, the
yardstick for schoolyards set in April 2011. Iwata Tomohiro, ‘TEPCO:
Radioactive substances belong to landowners, not us’, Asahi Shimbun
Weekly AERA, 24 November 2011, here.
4 See
David Pacchioli, ‘Absurd: Intentionally dumping Fukushima nuclear
material into ocean from land “is not considered dumping” —
Allowed under international law?’, Seafood Safety and Policy,
Oceanus, WHOI, Vol. 50, No. 1, Spring 2013, 14 May, 2013.
5 About
10 billion yen of the 25 trillion yen pledged for disaster recovery
over several years has been reserved to offset costs for utility
companies that were ordered to shut nuclear power plants in the
aftermath of the Fukushima disaster. See ‘Funds from disaster
relief budget given to nuclear operators’,
6 John
Holifena, ‘Japan’s PM Abe to push nuclear sales in Europe’,
JDP, 14 May
2013,http://japandailypress.com/japans-pm-abe-to-push-nuclear-technology-sales-in-europe-1428791/.
7 Uchiyama
Osamu, ‘Toshiba set to buy British nuclear power firm for 10
billion yen,’ Asahi Shimbun, 6 October 2013, here.
8 ‘Japan’s
PM Abe: “Contaminated Water Problem Will Be Gone by 2020 Summer
Olympics in Tokyo”,’ Jiji
Tsushin, 4 September 2013, here.
9 See
PSR, Nuclear Power and France: Setting the Record Straight’, 16
September 2008, here,
Jeff McMahon, ‘French System for Cleaning Fuushima Water Blamed for
Leukemia, Polluted Beaches in Europe’, 25 April 2011, here.
11 Mari
Yamaguchi, ‘Overflowing tank cause of new leak at Fukushima,
Associated Press, 3 October 2013,here.
12 See
Miguel Quintana, ‘Radiation Decontamination in Fukushima: a
critical perspective from the ground’, The Asia-Pacific Journal,
Vol 10, Issue 13, No 3, March 26, 2012 – See more here.
13 ‘Fish
caught off the Fukushima coast to hit the market’, 26 September
2013, here;
‘Yoshinoya to grow rice and vegetables in Fukushima,’ 1 October
2013, here.
14 For
example, Kameda Medical Institute purchased a system for cancer
treatment from Israel’s IceCure Medical Inc., 2 October 2013,
‘Innovative Israeli Cancer Treatment to be Tested in
Japan’, here.
15 ‘White
Paper: Fukushima Health Survey Occupies Medical and Legal Conundrum’,
Simply Info, 8 November 2012, here.
16 Winifred
Bird, ‘Fukushima nuclear cleanup could create its own environmental
disaster: Decontaminating the Fukushima region to remove radioactive
particles will not be possible without removing large amounts of
soil, leaves and plants,’ The Guardian, 9 January 2012, here.
The radiation safety standard of 100mSvy cited in this article are
contested.
17 Robert
Alvarez, ‘Nuclear Tuna and NPR’s Trivialization’, Institute for
Policy Studies, 31 May 2012, here.
See also, ‘Fukushima radiation could be ocean risk’, 26 January
2012, here.
18 Alexey
Yablokov, Vassily Nesterenko and Alexei Nesterenko, Mycle Schneider,
Hirose Takashi, Koide Hiroaki, Helen Caldicott, Arnie Gundersen and
Murata Mitsuhei among others, have argued that radiation and other
problems are worse than either TEPCO or the Japanese government have
admitted. The National Regulation Authority commissioner Fuketa
Toyoshi also wondered if TEPCO’s data could be relied upon at all.
See Matt McGrath, ‘Fukushima leak is ‘much worse than we were led
to believe’, 22 August 2013, here;
Jason Motlagh, ‘The News From Fukushima Just Gets Worse, and the
Japanese Public Wants Answers’, 22 August 2013, here.
19 Satoh
C., Kodaira M., ‘Effects of Radiation on Children,’ Nature, 1996,
383: 226; Nakamura N., ‘Genetic Effects of Radiation in
Atomic-bomb Survivors and Their Children: Past, Present and
Future,’ Journal of Radiation Research, 2006, 47
(Supplement): B67-B73.
20 See
‘Recommendations of the European Committee on Radiation Risk:
Health Effects of Ionising Radiation Exposure at Low Doses for
Radiation Protection Purposes Regulators’, Brussels, 2003, here.
21 Thierry
Ribault, ‘UN Special Rapporteur Anand Grover on Fukushima: A
Stunning Report Brushed Aside by the Japanese Government
国連人権委員会理事長アナンド・グローバー氏の目覚ましい福島報告書を払いのける日本政府’,
Japan Focus, 10 June 2013, here.
22 Between
1939 and 1941, scientists in the Manhattan Project observed that
‘fission products’ emitted photon and particulate radiation, and
from studying their metabolism they found that radiation was harmful
when ingested as well as to the embryo, and that Strontium was a
Calcium analogue and had carcinogenic effects that was harmful to the
unborn. In October 1943, a subcommittee of the S-1 Committee for ‘Use
of radioactive materials as military weapons’ comprising of Drs. J.
Conant, A. Compton and H. Urey wrote to General Groves advising on
weaponising such uranium products collected from nuclear pile rods
and dispersed by various means into enemy territory (dust, smoke or
liquid distributed by ground-fired projectile, land vehicle or aerial
bomb). The objective of such weapons was to contaminate enemy food
and water supplies, making the land uninhabitable, including airports
and railroad yards, cause casualties in military and civilian
populations, while protecting US troops and civilians with potassium
and vitamin D and calcium concentrate. See ‘Groves Memo’, 30
October 1943, here;
also Langley P., Medicine and the Bomb: Deceptions from Trinity to
Maralinga, Port Augusta: self-published, July 2012: 7-9.
23 For
example, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
(ATSDR), Toxicological Profile for Uranium, U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, 1999, here.
24 Pu
239 is an alpha emitter, has a half life of 240,000 years, mimics
iron and goes to the liver, spleen and bone marrow. It causes 10 to
1000 times more chromosome damage than the same amount of gamma or
beta radiation. It is pyrophoric (combusts upon contact with oxygen)
and changes its volume and density with temperature change. Its heat
makes it highly toxic when ingested, glows in the dark (Pu 238), and
currently fuels the Curiosity rover on Mars. Caesium 137, a gamma
emitter, is the most abundant fission product in nuclear fuel and
nuclear waste. Its half-life of 30 yrs, high-energy decay, chemical
reactivity and high solubility (Ci), means that Cs 137 will be
present for roughly 300 years after Fukushima. It attracts to muscle
tissues (prostate/ovary/breast cancer) and causes malignant muscle
cancers (rhabdomyosarcomas, heart arrhythmias and cardiac arrests,
muscle seizures, loss of consciousness, memory loss). Strontium
(Sr89-90) mimics calcium, goes to the bone and teeth, causes bone
cancers and leukaemia and is radioactive for 300 years. Along with
the above, there are many other radionuclides in the inventory of
nuclear reactors: alpha – thorium, radium, neptunium, curium 244,
americium 241, californium, polonium 210 (transuranic and actinides);
gamma – Cobalt 60, Irridium 92, Barium 137, Iodine 131, Lanthanum
140; Beta – Tritium, Phosphorous, Nickel, Carbon; Alpha and Beta –
Strontium 90, Cadmium 113, Europium 155, Krypton 85, Tin 121 (Sn),
Samarium 90; noble gases – Xenon and Iodine 131. As the weight or
chemical mass of a radionuclide causes most damage to internal
structures, when ingested heavy alpha particles are even more
destructive than beta and gamma emitters.
25 Natural
sources of gamma rays on Earth come from natural radioisotopes, and
from interactions with cosmic ray particles. The capacity of
radiation to mutate cells and increase mitosis rate means that
radiation is used in cancer therapy (white T cells or red blood
cells) and agriculture (new plant strains through mutated seeds;
controlled irradiation to kill bacteria in food). This can also
create less resistance to cytotoxins (chemical cells) which can
increase sickness.
26 See
‘Fukushima Prefecture Health Management Survey’, here;
‘Thyroid cancer found in 18 Fukushima children’, NHK, 21 August
2013, here;
‘Thyroid cancer found in 12 minors in Fukushima’, Kyodo, 5 June
2013, ‘Fukushima gov’t forced to reveal children’s thyroid
gland tests,’ 22 April 2013, here.
27 This
amount was estimated from Aoyama Michio’s IAEA statement on Caesium
and strontium only releases, ‘44.9 Tbq Contamination Released to
Sea and Air in Last 2 years at Fuku Daiichi’, 24 September
2013, here.
28 Fukushima
is registering 24.9 children per 100,000 compared to 11.3 children
per 100,000 in Chernobyl in the same time period. Kinoshita Kōta’s
calculation of 24.9 children per 100,000 people is higher than Dr.
Bandazhevsky’s calculation from the Gomel region 5 years after the
accident in 1991, where the frequency of thyroid cancer in children
was 11.3 children per 100,000 people. Including all actual and
suspected cases, the rate of children in Fukushima is more than two
times higher than the rate in areas near Chernobyl in less than half
the time. Kinoshita Kôta, ‘Radiation protection project’,
Kinoshita Kôta blog, here.
29 ‘TEPCO
finds new radioactive water leak at Fukushima’, Arirang News, 3
October 2013, 00:40-1:00, here.
30 For
a survey from 20 September – 3 October 2013, see Katsumi Takahiro,
‘Fall Japan 2013 Japan National Residents Nosebleed Survey
v1.0’, here.
See also, Takenouchi Mari, ‘Health damage shown among a family from
Fukushima city’, 24 September 2013, here.
31 Similar
to the way in which the dismissal of the relation of internal
radiation to the death from oesophagus cancer and cerebral
haemhorrage of 58 year old Yoshida Masao, who had remained to control
the meltdowns at the Fukushima NPP, the LDP Policy Bureau Chief Sanae
Takaichi sought to justify the nuclear power plant restarts by
declaring that ‘it is not that there has been a death from the
nuclear accident, including at Fukushima 1 Nuclear Power Plant. We
have no choice but utilize nuclear power plants as long as we secure
maximum safety’. Sanae went on to claim that ‘the stable supply
of power is indispensable for maintaining the competitiveness of
industries, and that a nuclear power plant costs enormous amount of
money if we think about the cost of decommissioning, but while it is
operating the cost is relatively cheap’. Editorial, ‘“There are
no deaths from the nuclear accident”, LDP Policy Bureau Chief’,
Asahi Shimbun, here.
32 The health
risk from regular tritium emissions (40,000 Bq/l) from nuclear power
plants has been a source of contention between nuclear protection
bodies. In 1990 in Canada concern was such that the ICRP sought to
lower the safety standard for tritium to 7000 Bq/litre and then to
lower it by 100 Bq/litre every five years until 20 Bq /litre.
33 ‘S.
Korean minister calls Japan ‘immoral’ for covering-up radiation
leak’, Yonhap, 30 September 2013, here.
34 John
Pilger, ‘From Iraq, a tragic reminder to prosecute the war
criminals,’ 27 May 2013, here.
The US military also used white phosphorus (wP) against Iraqi
‘insurgents’ during the assault on Fallujah in April and November
2004. WP disperses into a gaseous cloud from the exploded warhead,
and burns upon contact with oxygen, water or the skin. The Pentagon
claimed wP was a conventional not a chemical weapon and that
civilians were not targeted. Maurizio Torrealta, ‘Fallujah: The
Hidden Massacre’, RAI TV, 2005; George Monbiot, ‘The US Used
Chemical Weapons in Iraq–And Then Lied About It’, The Guardian,
15 November 2005.
35 An
estimated 14 per cent of Iraq’s population are orphans, and one
million families are without fathers.
36 See
Braverstock K., ‘Science, Politics and Ethics in the Low Dose
Debate’, Medicine, Conflict and Survival, vol 21 (2), 2005: 88-100.
38 See
Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, ‘Rise
of Cancers and Birth Defects in Iraq: World Health Organization
Refuses to Release Data,’
Global Research, 31 July 2013. Savabieasfahani states that Iraqi
doctors are convinced that the epidemic is self-evident, despite the
difficulties in absolute proof of cancer etiology. He cites British
oncologist Karol Sikora, chief of the cancer programme of WHO in the
British Medical Journal (Owen Dyer, ‘WHO suppressed evidence on
effects of depleted uranium, expert says’, 9 November 2006) who
points out that ‘requested radiotherapy equipment, chemotherapy
drugs and analgesics are consistently blocked by United States and
British advisers [to the Iraq Sanctions Committee]’, and that
mentioning Iraq at the WHO was discouraged due to its political
nature. See also Denis
Halliday,
‘WHO Refuses to Publish Report on Cancers and Birth Defects in Iraq
Caused by Depleted Uranium Ammunition’, Global Research, 13
September, 2013; Rob Edwards, ‘WHO ‘Suppressed’ Scientific
Study Into Depleted Uranium Cancer Fears in Iraq,’ The
Sunday Herald, 24
February 2004.
39 Busby
C., Hamdan M., Ariabi E., ‘Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth
Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005–2009’,International
Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
See also, Patrick Cockburn, ‘Toxic legacy of US assault on Fallujah
‘worse than Hiroshima’: The shocking rates of infant mortality
and cancer in Iraqi city raise new questions about battle’, The
Independent, 24 July 2010, here.
40 Chris
Busby, ‘Why the WHO report on congenital anomalies in Iraq is a
disgrace,’ 29 September 2013, here.
41 There
are reports which suggest the chemical toxicity of DU (U238)
munitions were being associated with post-exertional malaise. See US
Army Environmental Policy Institute,
June 1995. Also Bertell R., ‘Depleted Uranium: All the questions
about DU and Gulf War Syndrome are not yet answered’, International
Journal of Health Services, vol 36, No 3, 2006: 503-520, McDiarmid
MA. et al., Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A,
67:277–296, 2004. There remains contention over whether it is the
alpha-particles or the chemical toxicity of uranium which effects
genetic material. See Royal Society, Health Hazards of Depleted
Uranium Munitions: Part II, London: Royal Society, March
2002; Hindin R., Brugge D., Panikkar B., ‘Teratogenicity of
Depleted Uranium Aerosols: A Review from an Epidemiological
Perspective,’ Environmental Health, 2005, 26(4): 17. Albina
L., Belles M., Gomez M., Sanchez D.J., Domingo J. L., ‘Influence of
Maternal Stress on Uranium-Induced Developmental Toxicity in
Rats,’ Experimental Biology and Medicine, 2003, 228
(9):1072-1077; Arfsten D.P., Still K.R., Ritchie G.D., ‘A
Review of the Effects of Uranium and Depleted Uranium Exposure on
Reproduction and Fetal Development,’ Toxicology and Industrial
Health, 2001, 17: 180-191.
42 From
documents released by the RERF in December 2011, Honda Koya of the
Ota Hospital in Nagasaki found that the ABCC had done a survey
linking black rain exposure to purpura and epilation. 13,000 people
were exposed to black rain. Direct exposure after detonation within
1km was 4,500 mSv, and 2km 100 mSv, but indirect exposure of 10-35
mSv through rain and ground shine extended beyond the 2km radius and
was suppressed. See ‘Black Rain: Fruitless data on the A-bomb
survivors’, NHK, 1 September 2012, here.
43 Hanford
was a plutonium fabrication facility next to Rocky Flats, owned by
the US AEC in Arvada, Colorado, and was operated initially by Dow
Chemical. The metal would be shipped to Rocky Flats to be made into
useful shapes for the reactors – the ‘pits’ – and then
shipped to the Pantex Plant for final assembly into bombs. By 1984,
many families had been driven from Hanford due to sickness and
cancers. Tom Bailey was a leader of a lobby group seeking
compensation, which was finally recognised in the Radiation Exposure
Compensation Act (1990). There is now major concern for the remaining
plutonium waste buried beneath the Hanford site (10 metric tonnes, 67
tanks, 710,000 m3) contaminating the groundwater.
44 Graeub
R., The Petkau Effect – The Devastating Effect of Nuclear Radiation
on Human Health and the Environment, New York: Four Walls Eight
Windows, 1994; Burlakova E. B., Naidich V., The Effects of Low Dose
Radiation: New Aspects of Radiobiological Research prompted by the
Chernobyl nuclear disaster, Utrecht and Boston: VSP, 2004.
45 See
Sternglass E., Secret Fallout: Low level radiation from Hiroshima to
Three-Mile Island, New York: McGraw Hill 1981.
46 Hesse-Honegger
C., Heteroptera, New York: Scalo Publishers, 2002.
47 These
figures were re-confirmed at the Chernobyl Forum 2005, attended by
delegates from Belarus, Russia, Ukraine, the IAEA, World Bank Group,
WHO and UNSCEAR. See here.
48 Hesse-Honegger
C., Wallimann P., ‘Malformation of True Bug (Heteroptera): a
Phenotype Field Study of the Possible Influence of Artificial
Low-Level Radioactivity’, Chemistry & Biodiversity, 2008, Vol.
5, Issue 4, pp. 499-539. See also Tom Raum, Associated Press, ‘U.N.:
Worst effects of Chernobyl disaster may yet occur’, Record Journal,
26 April 2000; Rebecca Harms, ‘The Chernobyl Legacy’, 9 June
2006, #645-646, here.
49 Møller
A., Mousseau T. et al., ‘Abundance of birds in Fukushima as judged
from Chernobyl,’ Environmental Pollution, Vol 164, May 2012:
36–39, here; ‘Cataracts
in the eyes of birds in Chernobyl and Fukushima’, The
Economist, 7 September 2013, here.
50 25,000
Bq/Kg were measured in macaques. See Nippon Veterinary and Life
Science University (NVLU) quoted in ‘Scientists in groundbreaking
study on effects of radiation in Fukushima’, Asahi Shimbun, 10
April 2012, here.
51 ‘Surviving
at the Ranch of Hope: Irradiated Cows from Namie, Evidence of the
Nuclear Reactor Accident’, Tokyo Shimbun, 6 September 2013, here in
‘Ranch of Hope – Fukushima’ Official Blog, here;
also ‘The man living within20km of the nuclear reactor: Alone in
the Zone’, Vice, 10 March 2013, here.
52 ‘3100
Bq/kg of Radioactive Caesium from Wild Mice in Kawauchi-mura’,
EX-SKF, 13 May 2012, here; NHK,
14 May 2012, here.
The Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute also measured
worms (19,500 Bq/kg Cs137), leaves (319,000 Bq/kg Cs137) and soil
(5cm – 20,900 Bq/kg Cs137). See ‘High radioactive Caesium levels
detected in worms 20 km from nuke plant’, Mainichi Daily News, 6
February 2012, here;
‘High Caesium found in earthworms’, Japan Times Online, 8
February 2012, here.
53 ‘Scientists
detect highest Caesium levels in a year in Fukushima,’ Asahi
Shimbun, 4 July 2013, here.
55 Between
3-5 July 2013, Fukushima Diary reported 4,300,000 Bq/m3 of all β at
6m from the sea (an 1.4 x increase in 3 days) and 900,000,000 Bq/m3
of all β in the groundwater, the worst reading in groundwater ever
published by TEPCO. The exact readings of Strontium-90 were not
announced. See here.
56 ‘How
a Scientist Was Censored by the Japanese Government After the
Fukushima Accident’, Fukushima Voice, 27 September 2013, here;
Kanda J., ‘Continuing 137Cs release to the sea from the Fukushima
Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant through 2012’, Biogeosciences
Discussions, 10: 3577-3595, 2013, here;
Geoff Brumfel, ‘Oceans still suffering from Ocean still suffering
from Fukushima fallout: Continuing leaks and contaminated sediment
keep radiation levels high’, Nature, 14 November 2012, here.
57 Aoyama
M., ‘Fukushima derived radionuclides in the ocean’, here,
Negishi Takuro, Fujiwara Shinichi, ‘Contaminated water flowing into
ocean despite Abe’s claim’, Asahi Shimbun, 20 September
2013, here.
58 While
tritiated water may be cleared from the human body in about 10 days
(Garland), organically bound tritium (tritium bound in animal or
plant tissue) can stay in the body for 10 years or more and regular
exposure can lead to chronic exposure. Tritium from tritiated water
can become incorporated into DNA, the molecular basis of heredity for
living organisms. Most studies indicate that tritium in living
creatures can produce typical radiogenic effects including cancer,
genetic effects, developmental abnormalities and reproductive effects
(Straume; Rytomaa; Torok; Dobson). Studies have shown that there is
no evidence of a threshold for damage from 3H exposure, and that low
doses of tritium can even cause more cell death (Dobson), mutations
(Ito) and chromosome damage (Hori) than higher tritium doses. Tritium
can cause damage two or more times greater per dose than either
x-rays or gamma rays (Straume; Dobson). There is no technology that
has been developed to remove it from water. See Folkers C., ‘Tritium:
Health Consequences’, NIRS, 2006, here.
59 Mycle
Schneider, Antony Froggatt et al., The World Nuclear Industry Status
Report 2013, 30 July 2013, here.
60 ‘Sun,
sand, surf and radiation in shadow of Fukushima’, The Daily
Tribune, 1 September 2013, here.
61 The
NOAA was quoted by the Emergency and Disaster Information Service –
Biological Hazard in multi-countries as reporting over 200 diseased
or dead seals found in Canada (Tuktoyuktak), Russia (Kaktovik,
Chukotka), Alaska (Barrow, Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge). http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/site/?pageid=event_desc&edis_id=BH-20111013-32661-MLC. This
was also reported by major news agencies including MSNBC and Reuters.
See ‘Independent fisheries scientist Alexandra Morton reported the
damage to sock eye salmon. See Lake Babine sockeye fishery at risk of
unprecedented closure’, The Globe and Mail, 12 August 2013, here.
62 Carrie
Arnold, ‘Massive Starfish Die-Off Baffles Scientists,’ National
Geographic, 9 September 2013,
Hi Robin Western, I don't mean to be pedantic but the author's name of this article is not Jacob Bronowski, but Adam Broinowski. While I would like to lay claim to a household name like that I'm still alive. If you could change it, that would be great. Also the version at Japan Focus is better as it has the typos corrected... www.japanfocus.org/-Adam-Broinowski/4009. keep up your great work, Adam.
ReplyDeleteSorry about the oversight. Corrected.
ReplyDelete