“Radionuclides from Fukushima due to hit U.S. West Coast any day now”
- Senior Scientist: “Really bizarre” U.S. gov’t not testing for it
- Concerned officials contacting him about threat
24
November, 2013
Cape
Cod Times,
Nov. 24, 2013:
With
the first plume of water carrying radionuclides from Fukushima due to
hit the U.S. West Coast any day now, [Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution Senior Scientist Ken] Buesseler’s latest project is to
convince the federal government to monitor radiation levels in the
sea water. [...] He predicts the radiation will be so diluted after
the long journey across the Pacific that it will pose no threat [...]
But he knows that’s not enough to reassure the public. [...] he
knows people are concerned [...] he fields regular phone calls from
surfers and salmon fishermen as well as congressmen. [...] WHOI
plans to set up a website, probably by mid-December, that will allow
people to mail samples of water [...]
Nuclear
Regulatory Commission
[Buesseler]
spent this past week in Washington, D.C., meeting with
representatives of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the
Department of Energy, asking them to come up with some sort of plan
to keep tabs on levels of radionuclides [...] Scott Burnell,
spokesman for the NRC, called it crowd sourcing and said Buesseler
discussed the plans during a “friendly back and forth” meeting
Friday. “He’s one of a few people who does this research,”
Burnell said. “It’s not replicated in a lot of places.”
U.S.
Congress
Buesseler
also talked with U.S. Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., [...] Markey said
in an email that an increased federal role is not likely considering
the budgetary brakes being applied by the Republicans in Congress.
“The sequester is a double-punch, cutting funding for the agencies
charged with promoting scientific discovery and protecting our
natural resources,” he said.
Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution Senior Scientist Ken Buesseler:
We’ve known that for two and half years. Every day they are making
contaminated water [...] I’m a little disappointed in Japan. What
(the denial has) done is made the public extremely mistrustful.
[...] We don’t have a U.S. agency responsible for radiation
in the ocean [...] It’s really bizarre. [...] Given what’s
happened at Fukushima [...] Wouldn’t you want to have some
measurement?
More
from Buesseler: Graphic:
900-mile-long "front" of most contaminated water from
Fukushima Daiichi moving across Pacific toward U.S., Canada (VIDEO)
Fukushima:
WHOI senior scientist studies irradiated water
24
November, 2013
WOODS
HOLE — Sloshing with Japanese sea water, the 5-gallon plastic jugs
crowding Ken Buesseler's laboratory at the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution contain evidence of an ongoing nuclear crisis.
Collecting
samples off the coast where the Fukushima nuclear power plant was
damaged in a March 2011 earthquake, the WHOI senior scientist
measured higher than normal radiation levels long after the original
disaster.
OFF
THE CHARTS
The
Fukushima disaster resulted in an unprecedented release of
radioisotopes to the ocean, according to the spring edition of
Oceanus, a Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution publication. It says
the amount of cesium-137 isotopes in surface ocean waters off
Fukushima was 10,000 to 100,000 times greater than amounts entering
the ocean after Chernobyl or from atmospheric nuclear weapons tests in
the 1960s.
"It
was very concerning," Buesseler said during a recent interview
in his lab, dubbed "Cafe Thorium," after the naturally
occurring radioactive metal.
"It
dropped off, but it never went back to pre-Fukushima levels," he
said. Buesseler, along with a team from WHOI, made the first of his
three visits to the Fukushima area in June 2011, suspected
groundwater flowing through the reactor site was carrying radiation
into the sea.
After
denying that scenario for months, the Tokyo Electric Power Co., the
Japanese utility that operates the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant,
admitted in August that there have been spills at the site and that
irradiated groundwater is coursing through the Fukushima property on
a daily basis.
Leaks
from hastily constructed storage tanks holding contaminated water
used by cleanup workers to cool down the reactor site also are
contributing to the ongoing radioactivity.
"We've
known that for two and half years. Every day they are making
contaminated water," Buesseler said. "I'm a little
disappointed in Japan. What (the denial has) done is made the public
extremely mistrustful."
With
the first plume of water carrying radionuclides from Fukushima due to
hit the U.S. West Coast any day now, Buesseler's latest project is to
convince the federal government to monitor radiation levels in the
sea water.
"We
don't have a U.S. agency responsible for radiation in the ocean,"
Buesseler said. "It's really bizarre."
He
predicts the radiation will be so diluted after the long journey
across the Pacific that it will pose no threat to American fisheries
or recreational activities.
"It's
very much a coastal Japan contaminant problem," Buesseler said.
But
he knows that's not enough to reassure the public.
Given
what's happened at Fukushima, Buesseler asked, "Wouldn't you
want to have some measurement?"
He
spent this past week in Washington, D.C., meeting with
representatives of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the
Department of Energy, asking them to come up with some sort of plan
to keep tabs on levels of radionuclides in the ocean.
Buesseler
also talked with U.S. Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., who agreed the
federal government has a role in making sure the oceans are healthy
and safe.
But
Markey said in an email that an increased federal role is not likely
considering the budgetary brakes being applied by the Republicans in
Congress.
"The
sequester is a double-punch, cutting funding for the agencies charged
with promoting scientific discovery and protecting our natural
resources," he said.
Immediately
after the earthquake, Markey, then a Congressman, wrote the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration asking for information on how the agency was
protecting citizens from contaminated seafood and agricultural
products.
His
concerns were further heightened last year after bluefin tuna caught
near San Diego were found to be tainted with elevated levels of
radioactive cesium-134 from swimming in waters off the coast of
Japan.
Despite
carrying "fingerprints" of Fukushima isotopes, the tuna is
still safe to eat, with traces of radiation 100 times lower than what
is acceptable for consumption levels in the U.S., Buesseler said.
But
he knows people are concerned. In his office on the fourth floor of
the Clark building on Woods Hole Road, he fields regular phone calls
from surfers and salmon fishermen as well as congressmen.
'IT
WAS SPOOKY'
In
the absence of a government monitoring program, Buesseler and other
people at WHOI have come up with their own radiation measurement
program.
WHOI
plans to set up a website, probably by mid-December, that will allow
people to mail samples of water collected off their beaches and docks
to the Cape-based scientific institution, which will test them —
for a tax-free donation to WHOI, Buesseler said.
Scott
Burnell, spokesman for the NRC, called it crowd sourcing and said
Buesseler discussed the plans during a "friendly back and forth"
meeting Friday.
"He's
one of a few people who does this research," Burnell said. "It's
not replicated in a lot of places."
Scientific
interest in measuring radiation in ocean waters dropped after the
atmospheric nuclear test ban treaty in 1963, Buesseler said.
His
own expertise in the field was honed after the Chernobyl meltdown in
1986, when he studied the impact of the nuclear fallout on the Black
Sea.
After
the earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima reactors less than
three years ago, Buesseler got private funding from the Gordon and
Betty Moore Foundation to pull together an international team of 17
scientists that chartered a boat from Hawaii to Japan to inspect the
damage.
"It's
almost like getting to a crime scene," Buesseler said. "You
wanted to get there as fast as you could."
Photographs
show the team members on the boat, the boxy white buildings of the
stricken nuclear reactor clearly visible in the background.
"It
was spooky," Buesseler said.
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