Over
700 Fukushima waste bags swept away by torrential floods
RT,
18
September, 2015
Extensive
and destructive floods across eastern Japan have swept more than 700
bags containing Fukushima-contaminated soil and grass into Japan’s
rivers, with many still unaccounted for and some spilling their
radioactive content into the water system.
Authorities
in the small city of Nikko in Japan’s Tochigi Prefecture, some 175
km away from the Fukushima nuclear power plant, have said that at
least 334 bags containing radioactive soil have been swept into a
tributary of the Kinugawa river, The Asahi Shimbun reports.
According
to the city’s authorities, the washed-away waste was only part of
hundreds of bags being stored at the Kobyakugawa Sakura Koen park
alongside the river. Another 132 bags of waste reportedly rolled down
the slopes.
Flooding swept away radiation cleanup bags in Fukushimahttp://t.co/lqILutETYspic.twitter.com/vdqupkAWdS
— Lita Zahn (@LitaZahn) September 18, 2015
The
incident happened after Tropical Storm Etau caused vast flooding
across Japan forcing the Kinugawa River to burst its banks on
September 10. Twenty bags were found empty downstream on Thursday.
Three hundred and fourteen bags, each with a capacity of one cubic
meter, remain unaccounted for.
However
Nikko's Mayor Fumio Saito said that radiation levels at the recovery
site show normal measurements of 0.14 microsieverts per hour, below
the threshold of 0.23 microsieverts per set by the central
government.
“The
radiation level is so low that I believe there will not be a huge
impact,” Saito
said.
【福島 豪雨で流出した除染ごみは395袋】 すでに発見された314袋のおよそ半数が破れて中身が無くなっていたということです。 http://t.co/BDwwBt7O50pic.twitter.com/i0xAiH7AhM
— NHK生活・防災 (@nhk_seikatsu) September 15, 2015
In
a separate incident earlier this week, the village of Iitate of the
Fukushima prefecture claimed that at least 395 bags containing waste
were swept by the floods from a decontamination work site into a
river. At least 153 of the bags were found to be empty.
Immediately
after the tropical storm hit Japan, media reported that 82 bags had
been washed away by the floods. At the same time, the storm also
caused the contaminated water kept in specially designed tanks to
overflow and spill into the sea.
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