‘Fukushima
fish ends in garbage’: Radioactive fears blight Japan’s seafood
industry
Due
to radiation fears, Fukushima Prefecture fishermen have to dump most
of their catch. Two years into the nuclear disaster, the world is
growing weary of Japan’s seafood, with South Korea even banning
Japanese fish and seafood imports.
RT
,
25
December, 2013
Fish
has traditionally not only been an integral part of Japanese food
culture, but also one of its prized exports. In 2011, before the
Fukushima disaster, Japan maintained one of the world's largest
fishing fleets and accounted for almost 15 percent of global catches,
according to Forbes.
However,
there are serious concerns now, although the industry seems to be on
a slow, but sure recovery route.
The
concerns mainly arise over catches made in the waters close to the
Fukushima nuclear power plant. After it was established that the
hydraulic system at the Fukushima nuclear power plant was severely
irradiated, fears grew that the contamination could spread into the
Pacific.
“There
is significant contamination in the bottom segment, especially in the
pond and the river system, where we can find a very high amount of
radioactive cesium accumulated,” Yamashike Yosuke, Environmental
Engineering Professor at Kyoto University, told RT.
Many
Japanese seafood firms are under threat as there are five prefectures
possibly affected by contamination in the sea, accounting for almost
40,000 tons of fish per year, RT’s Aleksey Yaroshevsky reports from
Soma, a coastal town in the Fukushima prefecture.
Fish
factories around the Fukushima prefecture now have to take radiation
measurements.
“We’re
taking samples from every catch we make and if we ever find even the
slightest trace of radiation, we’ll destroy the whole catch. So far
there has been none, this fish is safe,” Akihisa Sato assured RT, a
worker in a fish laboratory in Soma, Japan.
But
Japanese fishermen can’t convince customers that their fish is
safe, even though the authorities insist they're doing their best to
show they've got a grip on the problem. In September, South Korea
became the first country to ban seafood imports from Japan.
“The
situation is pretty much under control. We’ve built fences [so as]
not to let polluted ground waters leak into the ocean,” maintained
Youshimi Hitosugi, a Fukushima nuclear plant operator in TEPCO’s
Corporate Communications Department.
But
despite lab workers assurances that the fish was free of any harmful
particles and TEPCO standing firm that the nearby waters are clear of
radiation, Yaroshevsky learnt that most of the seafood he personally
saw at the port of Soma will never make it to the shelves of fish
markets or restaurant tables.
“Most
of the fish caught within the 30 kilometer radius is thrown into the
garbage because it is radiated. And TEPCO is paying to local
fishermen for it, so that they’re happy and keep silent on that.
Some of it though makes it to stores, but only locally,” economist
Hirokai Kurosaki revealed to RT.
So
far work hasn’t stopped in Soma, despite the port being in the
heart of the area ravaged by the 2011 tsunami and just a few
kilometers from the Fukushima nuclear power plant heavily
contaminated by radiation. Seafood of all shapes and sizes continues
to land in Soma several times a day, only to end up being thrown
away.
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