America
dumped radioactive trash on the ocean floor
Nuclear
Waste Sits on Ocean Floor U.S. Has Few Answers on How to Handle
Atomic Waste It Dumped in the Sea
By
JOHN R. EMSHWILLER and DIONNE SEARCEY WSJ Dec. 31, 2013
2
January, 2014
More
than four decades after the U.S. halted a controversial ocean dumping
program, the country is facing a mostly forgotten Cold War legacy in
its waters: tens of thousands of steel drums of atomic waste.
From
1946 to 1970, federal records show, 55-gallon drums and other
containers of nuclear waste were pitched into the Atlantic and
Pacific at dozens of sites off California, Massachusetts and a
handful of other states. Much of the trash came from
government-related work, ranging from mildly contaminated lab coats
to waste from the country’s effort to build nuclear weapons.
Federal
officials have long maintained that, despite some leakage from
containers, there isn’t evidence of damage to the wider ocean
environment or threats to public health through contamination of
seafood. But a Wall Street Journal review of decades of federal and
other records found unanswered questions about a dumping program once
labeled “seriously substandard” by a senior Environmental
Protection Agency official:
• How
many dump sites are there? Over the years, federal estimates have
ranged from 29 to more than 60.
• How
much of various types of radioisotopes are in the waste containers?
While some isotopes are short-lived, others remain radioactive for
hundreds or thousands of years.
• Has
evidence of radioactive contamination in fish been adequately
pursued? A 1983 California law calling for fish testing and annual
reports on a major dump site off San Francisco produced just one
state report, in 1991, even though that study found fish
contamination and recommended follow-up research.
• Where
are all the containers—whose numbers top 110,000, by one federal
count—on the sea floor, even at known dump sites? For instance, an
estimated 47,000 containers lie at the site near San Francisco.
Though there were three designated dump areas for the containers,
“many were not dropped on target,” according to a 2010 report
from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which
called the waste site a “potentially significant resource threat.”
Much
of the site—about 50 miles west of San Francisco, near the Farallon
Islands—is within a national marine sanctuary that the federal
government describes as “a globally significant” ecosystem “that
supports abundant wildlife and valuable fisheries.” Only about 15%
of an estimated 540 square miles of sea floor containing the barrels,
at depths from 300 to over 6,000 feet, has been evaluated, the NOAA
report
said………http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304773104579268563658319196
Wall
St. Journal: Plutonium levels 1,000 times normal on seafloor 50 miles
from San Francisco
- Expert Appalled: Major nuclear dump offshore is a threat to health
- Around 50,000 containers of radioactive waste in globally significant ecosystem
2
January, 2013
Wall
St. Journal,
Dec. 31, 2013:
[There's]
a major [nuclear] dump site [...] about 50 miles west of San
Francisco [in] “a globally significant” ecosystem “that
supports abundant wildlife and valuable fisheries."
[A]n
estimated 47,000 containers lie at the site near San Francisco
2010
report from [NOAA] [...] called the waste site a “potentially
significant resource threat.”
The
’91 Study
[S]tudy
found fish contamination and recommended follow-up research
A
spokeswoman for the California Department of Public Health said [...]
researchers “didn’t find anything in the first survey.”
“I
would beg to differ,” Thomas Suchanek, the principal investigator
and lead author of the 1991 study, said recently
[P]lutonium
in underwater sediment at the dump site was up to about 1,000 times
normal background levels
The
study found americium, a radioactive decay product of plutonium, in
some fish samples from the site as well as a comparison area about 60
miles away
Regularly
eating such contaminated fish, about a pound a week, could expose a
person to up to 18.5 millirems [...] A chest X-ray typically gives
about 2 to 10 millirems
More
‘Studying’
A
2001 federal study of part of the Farallon dump site [off San
Francisco] found indications of leakage from barrels
Estimates
of the radioactivity amounts in the containers “could be off as
much as a factor of 10 [...] little is known of the fate of
radioisotopes added to the sea.”
[FDA]
said that in 1990 it found traces of plutonium in fish samples from
the site but at levels well within safety standards
W.
Jackson Davis, a now-retired professor of biological and
environmental sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz
[...] [said] evidence showed environmental damage and health threats
were already arising at the dump sites
In
a recent interview, Mr. Davis recalled that the more he learned about
the subject, “the more appalled I became.”
EPA
and FDA would continue radiation sampling of commercial seafood
purchased in cities, such as San Francisco and Boston, near dump
sites
Interesting
timing for this article to be published by the Journal.
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