Radiation from Japan nuclear plant arrives on Alaska coast
Scientists
concerned about lack of monitoring plan
CBC,
2
November, 2013
Scientists
at the University of Alaska are concerned about radiation leaking
from Japan's damaged Fukushima nuclear plant, and the lack of a
monitoring plan.
Some
radiation has arrived in northern Alaska and along the west coast.
That's raised concern over contamination of fish and wildlife. More
may be heading toward coastal communities like Haines and Skagway.
Douglas
Dasher, a researcher at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, says
radiation levels in Alaskan waters could reach Cold War levels.
"The
levels they are projecting in some of the models are in the ballpark
of what they saw in the North Pacific in the 1960s," he said.
John
Kelley, a professor emeritus at the University of Alaska Fairbanks,
says he's not sure contamination will reach dangerous levels for
humans but says without better data, who will know?
"The
data they will need is not only past data but current data, and if no
one is sampling anything then we won't really know it, will we?
"The
general concern was, is the food supply safe? And I don't think
anyone can really answer that definitively."
He
says much of the monitoring is being done pro bono by universities,
NGOs and state organizations.
Could
the Entire Pacific Fishery Be Tainted by
Fukushima?
80,000
gallons per day of radioactive water, for 942 straight days, dumped
into the Pacific — and counting.
25
October, 2013
Distracting
the public from the 300 tons of highly radioactive water (80,000
gallons) spreading into the Pacific Ocean every day from the triple
reactor melt-through at Fukushima-Daiichi, is news of the plan to
build an underground “ice wall” to damn up the poisoned water
before it leaks to the sea. The project is reportedly a better plan
than the failed concrete wall that Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco)
first decided to build.
This
frozen finger-in-the-dike won’t be completed until 2015, and it
will then fail. Even if it were to work as planned, there is a risk
of reversing the water flow, forcing highly radioactive water to seep
out from the reactor buildings to the aquifer. Meanwhile, nothing is
slowing the relentless radioactive contamination of the Pacific —
the world’s largest ocean which covers about a third of Earth.
What
we’re being distracted from is the threat to the fishery caused by
Fukushima’s ongoing radioactive gusher. At least 300 tons of
cesium- and strontium-contaminated water is still spewing into the
Pacific every day. Tepco admitted in August that this massive
carcinogenic hemorrhage has been going on since March 11, 2011. It
amounts to about 85 million gallons — 80,000 gal. per day, for 942
days, dumped into the Pacific — and counting.
The
radiation dumped by Fukushima into the environment has exceeded that
of the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe, so we may stop calling it the
second worst nuclear power disaster in history. Total atmospheric
releases from Fukushima so far are between 5.6 and 8.1 times that of
Chernobyl, according to the 2013 World Nuclear Industry Status
Report. Prof. Komei Hosokawa, who wrote the Fukushima section, told
London’s Channel 4 News, “The situation is not under control.
Almost every day new things happen, and there is no sign that they
will control the situation in the next few months or years.”
Tepco
estimates about 900 peta-becquerels have spewed from Fukushima, and
the 2006 TORCH Report estimates that Chernobyl dispersed 110
peta-becquerels. (The mind-numbing “peta-becquerel” is a
quadrillion, or a thousand trillion Becquerels. A Becquerel is one
atomic disintegration per second.)
Where
have all the Becquerels gone?
Japan
has decided that fish contaminated with fewer than 100 Becquerels per
kilogram (Bq/kg) of cesium-137 is good enough to eat. Some local
officials have set a stricter bar of 50 Bq/kg.
In
the U.S. the permissible level of cesium in food is 1,200 Bq/kg.
Canada allows 1,000 Bq/kg. The difference is startling. The huge
discrepancy allows importation by the U.S. and Canada of what Japan
considers highly contaminated fish, vegetables and meat. Rice, fish,
beef and other Japanese exports poisoned by nuclear power’s single
worst nightmare is doubtless being consumed in the United States.
Gordon
Edwards, president of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear
Responsibility, told Canada’s CTVnews that the 1,000 Bq/kg
allowance is dangerous. “It has to be recognized that even Health
Canada acknowledges that even those level correspond to an increased
cancer risk of eight cancers per 1,000 people exposed over a 70-year
period. So these are not safe levels, even by Health Canada’s own
standards,” he said.
Cesium-137
and -134— muscle-seeking isotopes that can cause cancers and other
illnesses when ingested or inhaled — were and are being dumped into
the atmosphere in huge quantities by Fukushima. An April 12, 2011
warning about food contamination from the Low Level Radiation
Campaign in England said: “Vegetables and other foodstuffs showing
more than 50 Bq/kg of cesium indicate airborne contamination with
other radionuclides. LLRC advises food with more than 50 Bq/kg should
not be eaten unless there’s absolutely no choice. We recommend that
the Japanese government ask for international food aid supplies to
prevent its people eating contaminated food.”
The
Seattle Times reported last October that researchers found small
amounts of Fukushima’s cesium in albacore tuna caught off the
coasts of Washington and Oregon. The albacore warning followed the
May 2012 and Feb. 2013 findings of cesium-contamination in Blue fin
tuna caught off California.
The
Huffington Post said Aug. 28 that out of 170 types of fish tested in
the Fukushima area, 42 species were put off limits. CBS News put it a
little differently Aug. 20, noting that in the same region only 16
types of fish are considered safe to catch, compared with 150 types
before the catastrophe. Japanese public television reported July 11
that sea bass were found with 1,037 Bq/kg, or ten times the allowed
contamination. The Tokyo daily Asahi Shimbun noted Aug. 29, 2013 that
a greeling had 25,800 Bq/kg cesium, an all-time record in the 2 ½
years since the radiation gusher began. Pacific cod and black sea
bream had 3,300 Bq/kg.
Environmental
radioactivity bio-accumulates as it climbs the food chain. Smaller
species now under Japanese fishing bans — which are eaten by the
big tuna — eat species that are smaller yet. So prize fish like
tuna, which can live 30 years and are at the top of the food chain,
will eventually be poisoned with far more than “trace” amounts of
cesium.
Prof.
Ken Buesseler of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution says the
seafloor is a major reservoir for Fukushima’s cesium. “It looks
to me like the bottom fish, the fish that are eating, you know, crabs
and shellfish, the kinds of things that are article feeders — they
seem to be increasing their accumulation of the cesium isotopes
because of their habitat on the seafloor,” he told Science in Oct.
2012. The BBC reported Oct. 25, 2012 that flounder, conger, Pollock,
rockfish, skate and the popular U.S. imports cod, sole and halibut —
all bottom feeders or demersal — “consistently showed the highest
cesium counts.”
Bon
appétit!
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