Radiation
spike near Hanford nuclear waste site ‘natural’ – EPA
RT,
14
April, 2016
The
US Environmental Protection Agency chalked elevated gamma radiation
levels around America’s largest nuclear waste storage facility, the
Hanford site, up to natural causes, but RT’s Alexey Yaroshevsky has
found a few inconsistences in its claims.
RT
has reported extensively on the situation at Washington State’s
Hanford Nuclear storage facility since various leaks and injuries to
workers were reported. An incident on May 5th covered by RT, when
radiation levels in the area adjacent to the site skyrocketed,
prompted a federal investigation.
However,
following the RT report, a local newspaper urged its audience not to
“believe everything on the Internet” in an article extensively
quoting a statement from the EPA that claimed the elevated radiation
levels had a natural cause and were not connected to the Hanford
facility in any way.
“The
US Environmental Protection Agency and the Washington State
Department of Health agree that radiation from naturally occurring
radon was measured on an EPA monitor,” the EPA statement reads.
“The
scientists determined that the cause was a temporary elevation of
radon levels from the natural decay of certain types of elements
found in nearly all rocks and soil.”
The
statement also stresses that the spike in radiation could not have
been due to emissions from Hanford because the wind was blowing from
the opposite direction at the time the measurements were taken.
“The
Department of Health said that was not possible because the wind was
blowing the wrong direction for the radiation to have come from
Hanford at the time the reading was taken,” the EPA notes.
Yet
RT America correspondent Alexey Yaroshevsky compared the graph of the
radiation readings to wind maps provided by the US national weather
service and discovered that the EPA’s findings may not be entirely
correct, as the graph appears to show the wind circling around the
Hanford site and the area where the readings were taken.
Meanwhile,
health protection authorities seem to have quickly taken up the
radon-related scenario, emphasizing that radon is common in the area,
accumulating in places closer to the ground, and urging people with
basements to get radon-measurement canisters to check their homes for
excessive levels.
Radon
gas is a natural byproduct of Uranium decay in the soil and
considered a dangerous carcinogen that can cause lung cancer.
Estimates state that outdoor radon levels cause some 800 of the
21,000 radon induced lung cancer deaths that occur in the United
States every year.
However,
according to a map of radon levels from the EPA’s own website,
Benton County, in which the Hanford nuclear plant is located, has
relatively low levels radon, even when compared to other American
states.
READ
MORE: ‘I thought I was dying’: Ex-Hanford worker gravely ill
after inhaling toxic fumes (VIDEO)
The
Hanford nuclear site, on the other hand, holds some 56 million
gallons of radioactive waste stored in underground tanks that were
built between the 1940s and 1970s. Those who used to work at the
facility have told RT that vapor incidents are common when
radioactive waste is being transported between tanks, which happens
often, as the tanks are wearing out.
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