2011年10月24日 星期一

Fukushima: a Radioactive Graveyard in the Pacific Ocean?

goldsilver.com

No one wants to think about the massive aqueous deposition of radioactive materials into the Pacific Ocean, that much is now clear.

By September estimates of released contamination had risen to over 3,500 terabecquerels of cesium-137 released into the sea directly from the plant between March 11 and the end of May. Another 10,000 terabecquerels of cesium fell into the ocean after escaping from the reactors in the form of steam.

Initially reports had quieted concerns by stating that the materials would be diluted so vastly that the radioactivity would not be able to accumulate, and would not affect the environment. The experts claimed they would track the deposition and floating radioactive debris field making its way on a trans-Pacific trip to the United States.

Apparently, the experts in Japan didn't get the message. The Japanese regularly tested the seawater only for 'popular' Iodine and Cesium isotopes instead of all known fission-produced radioactive materials, for the first 3 months after the disaster. By March 31st, radioactive contamination concentration was 4,385 times the legal limit, up from 3,355 times on Tuesday, according to Kyodo.

In response, the government had pledged to increase radiation monitoring on land and by sea and to consider increasing the evacuation zone — however time has shown little action would follow these vows.
Experts Don't Fear A Radiation Graveyard

Water was constantly required for the workers to be able to get any cooling into Reactors 1-4, when water went in, steam came out. The ocean quickly became the radiation dumping ground, as untold tonnes of contaminated water has been confirmed to have directly flowed into the ocean, and TEPCO continually assured Japanese citizens that the majority of dispersal would occur over the Pacific.

TEPCO intentionally dumped radioactive materials into the ocean, as they had no additional room for storage, the levels showed no signs of decreasing, and all desalination hopes were falling woefully short. It would also be found that many leaks around, and inside of the reactors were also finding their way into the Pacific, but the public was told that there would not be any risk to them, or the living creatures in the sea.

After 7 months however, impact can be found all over the island nation, and spreading throughout the ocean, despite the expectations it would merely be diluted exponentially.

In September, scientists from the government's Meteorological Research Institute and the Central Research Institute of the Electric Power Industry announced their findings at a meeting of the Geochemical Society of Japan, adding that some of the cesium will also flow into the Indian Ocean and, eventually, reach the Atlantic.
Floating Radioactive Debris Reaching Hawaii Sooner Than Expected

The researchers believed that the cesium had initially dispersed into the Pacific from the coast of Fukushima Prefecture but would be taken to the southwest by the prevailing currents at a depth of around 1,300 feet.

Researchers thought it would take years to reach the islands. But now, according to a University of Hawaii researchers, the debris will arrive sooner than expected.

....Since the March 11th earthquake and tsunami, researchers have been predicting it would take about two years for the debris from Japan to hit Hawaii's west-facing beaches.

“We have a rough estimate of 5 to 20 million tons of debris coming from Japan,” said UH computer programming researcher Jan Hafner.

...Their path back to Russia crossed exactly across the projected field of the debris. Soon after passing the Midway Islands on Sept. 22, they hit the edge of the tsunami debris. “They saw some pieces of furniture, some appliances, anything that can float, and they picked up a fishing boat,” said Hafner. It was a 20-foot fishing boat with the word "Fukushima" on it. “That's actually our first confirmed report of tsunami debris,” said Hafner... Source: kitv.com

The Public Concern Was Never Really An 'Official' concern

In the first few days after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that damaged the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, government authorities and the company were criticized for not providing information in a timely fashion. A Kyodo News survey released Sunday found that 58% of respondents did not approve of the government's handling of the crisis at the nuclear plant.

More than two weeks later, updates provided via news conferences, press releases, data charts and Twitter feeds have become very frequent and very technical. To a lay person, the onslaught of numbers and unfamiliar terms can feel indecipherable.

"The question is, what is a reasonable interval to give people information?" said Dr. Robert Peter Gale, an American physician and expert on radiation who consulted on the 1986 nuclear disaster in Chernobyl and is now advising Japan's government. "Instead of just releasing each data point you get, sometimes it's better to base things on an average of readings over a period of time."

Source: LA Times

This ruse would only work, if the officials could hold off on monitoring and tracking the deposition as long as possible, until the plume had finally moved away from the coastline.

TEPCO had intentionally dumped over 11 tons of water in the first few weeks, all of which contained high concentrations of radioactive materials. There would be further reports that would be difficult to quantify, including unknown amount of contaminated water leaked into the ocean from a damaged reservoir, and a plethora of uncharted and un-monitored leaks from the reactors.

After dealing with the spring, the tsunami season arrived and even more contamination entered the sea through fallout from the air, and through precipitation runoff.

By March 26th, the news broke that levels near the reactor were 1,250 times the legal limits, as the levels of I-131 reported just a few hundred meters offshore boomed to ten times the already increased levels in a matter of days. Tepco also reported levels of caesium-137 - which has a longer half life of about 30 years - almost 80 times the legal maximum.

Findings throughout the summer challenged experts and officials however, as radiation levels found contamination in some parts had risen over 3,000 times the normal levels.

"This is a relatively high level," nuclear safety agency official Hidehiko Nishiyama said in a televised news conference.

Drinking 500ml of fresh water with the same concentration would expose a person to their annual safe dose, Mr Nishiyama said, but he ruled out an immediate threat to aquatic life and seafood safety.

"Generally speaking, radioactive material released into the sea will spread due to tides, so you need much more for seaweed and sea life to absorb it," Mr Nishiyama said.
Pledges to Monitor and Track Contamination Left Unattended

Japanese officials said they would check the seawater about 20 miles (30km) off the coast for radiation back in March, yet even though finding contamination, resumed testing withing 20 km, and downplayed the effects by stating they expected it to show there is no need to be concerned about any possible effect to fish.

“By the time that current reaches the Central Pacific, there are branches heading more towards Alaska and the South—that gets harder to predict,” said Ken Buesseler, a senior scientist with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute told Jeff McMahon, a reporter for Forbes.

“But that’s one of the things that several people hope to do by measuring these isotopes even at levels when they’re not harmful. We could actually track those ocean currents and better understand the circulation pattern in the Pacific.”

Japanese Science and Fisheries Agencies Late Decision to Expand Testing On Marine Products to Weekly Testing 20-30 km Around Fukushima Daiichi

The science ministry and the Fisheries Agency will strengthen testing on marine products and widen the survey for seawater for radiation contamination from the damaged Fukushima No.1 nuclear power plant.

The tests on marine products will be conducted once a week, in principle, depending on the size of the fish hauls, in Fukushima, Miyagi and Ibaraki prefectures.

The government eased restrictions on land use outside the 20-kilometer no-entry zone around the plant in September. It will now test waters 20-30 km from the plant for radiation, and eventually survey seawater beyond 280 km from the coast using more accurate instruments, officials said.
Sources:

* ajw.asahi.com, via Nuclear News | What The Physics?
* Forbes.com
* SkyNews
* TEPCO
* IAEA


Lucas Whitefield Hixson is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Lucas Whitefield Hixson

13 則留言:

Master NLP 提到...

我去食自助餐,仲見D人猛食魚生,海產,一D安全意識都無.就算知道產地不是來自日本,我都唔會食,因為海水是流動的.日本的綠茶,311前我才買,311後的食品,no way.

Lisa 提到...

回nlpsonia,
依家買野真麻煩, 日本野唔買, 台灣野又唔買, 無乜好食啦 !
依家都係選香港出產會好 D !
快D買一些罐頭魚, 遲下無魚好食啦 !

Master NLP 提到...

Lisa,最近係經濟通個邊看過一篇文章(唔記得邊個寫),話佢有日本朋友來港,佢朋友話日本人在311後都是找舊貨食用,但好低調咁做,佢來港見到有好多日本人現在不會買來食用的東西放在超市貨架上,覺得好驚訝!

不過我有疑問,當舊貨都食完的時候,其他國家又受到輻射汙染影響,又有甚麼可食呢?

Lisa 提到...

回nlpsonia,
睇怕日本人都要移民啦和唔食日本野 !
我本來去超市買魚肉脹俾D孫, 點知全部made in Japan, 所以無買 !

小初哥 提到...

我D朋友重話去日本玩...依家所有魚生都唔食LU...

Master NLP 提到...

Lisa,如果你相信陰謀論& depopulation plan,你有無想過日本政府(或背後組織)咁做就係一個depopulation plan?
我在311之前已經知道有depopulation plan E樣野.

Lisa 提到...

回nlpsonia,
日本政府唔會蠢到去自殺哇 ?

Master NLP 提到...

Lisa,元首與政府係唔會有事,犧牲的只是國民.

Gordon 提到...

我就大件事啦,食魚生食到上晒癮先來呢單大鑊野。
我死忍到五月,係流晒鼻涕口水情況下,終於明知有毒都忍唔住又食番...
我諗係我計咖啡癮後,呢鋪魚生癮都係戒唔到,嗚嗚

Lisa 提到...

回Gordon,
我唔食生野都 miss 壽司, 睇來日本引你地上隱太成功啦 !
所以好多人明知會有幅射都照食, 食咗先算 XD !

gogoldjoe 提到...

建議大家唔好去高級日本料理店,愈高級愈死,因為食材好多日本運過來,反而cheap果d大部份唔係日本來,好似甜蝦,多數係加拿大貨,帶子就係澳洲貨。三文魚多數挪威來,真正日本三文其實好鬼貴。想食魚生,唔一定要去日本餐廳。

gogoldjoe 提到...

信報何華真寫過幾篇關於日本人文章,話佢地只係表面和諧,實質唔係,東京電力日日收到幾萬封恐嚇信,十足十電影《告白》。

Lisa 提到...

回Joe,
我在311後都沒食過日本餐, 只是唔小心上兩個月前買咗一盒日本朱古力cookies 而食咗兩塊 XD !