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Just in case a global viral pandemic, whose sources are still unclear and apparently now include human feces,
wasn't enough, the global outrage meter is about to go "up to eleven"
with Japan now set to flood the world's oceans with radioactive water.
In a move that will surely prompt a furious response from Greta
Thunberg's ghost writers (unless of course it doesn't fit a very narrow
agenda), a panel of experts advising Japan’s government on a
disposal method for the millions of tons of radioactive water from the
destroyed Fukushima nuclear plant on Friday recommended releasing it
into the ocean. And, as Reuters notes, based on past practice it is likely the government will accept the recommendation.
Tokyo Electric, or Tepco, has collected nearly 1.2 million tonnes of contaminated water from
the cooling pipes used to keep fuel cores from melting since the plant
was crippled by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011. The water is stored
in huge tanks that crowd the site.
The panel under the industry ministry came to the conclusion after
narrowing the choice to either releasing the contaminated water into the
Pacific Ocean or letting it evaporate - and opted for the former, even
though it means that Japan's neihgbors will now have to suffer the
consequences of the biggest nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.
Previously the committee had ruled out other possibilities, such as
underground storage, that lack track records of success. At the meeting,
members stressed the importance of selecting proven methods and said "the government should make clear that releasing the water would have a significant social impact."
Japan's neighbor, South Korea, has for much of the past decade
retained a ban on imports of seafood from Japan’s Fukushima region
imposed after the nuclear disaster and summoned a senior Japanese
embassy official last year to explain how the Fukushima water would be
dealt with. They will soon have a very unsatisfactory answer.
The build-up of contaminated water at Fukushima has been a major
sticking point in the clean-up, which is likely to last decades,
especially as the Olympics are due to be held in Tokyo this summer with
some events less than 60 km from the wreck plant and the Fukushima
seclusion zone which will remain uninhabitable for centuries. According
to Reuters, athletes are planning to bring their own radiation detectors and food to the Games.
In 2018, the plant operator, TEPCO, apologized after admitting it
lied about the cleanup efforts and that its filtration systems had not
removed all dangerous material from the water - and the site was running
out of room for storage tanks. Among the ludicrous proposals concocted
to contain the radioactive water was an idea straight out of Game of
Thrones - an underground ice wall. It did not work.
As a result, having given up on any containment approaches, Tokyo
will now literally flood the world with radioactive water. Perhaps in an
attempt to mitigate the angry outcry from a world that is suddenly
obsessed with a clean environment, Japan said it plans to remove all
radioactive particles from the water except tritium, an isotope of
hydrogen that cannot be effectively removed with current technology.
While it is unclear just how Japan plans on "filtering" out radiation,
we with them the best of luck with that particular PR campaign.
“Compared to evaporation, ocean release can be done more securely,” the
committee said, pointing to common practice around the world where
normally operating nuclear stations release water that contains tritium
into the sea.
Needless to say, even the locals disagree: releasing treated water into the ocean would do "immeasurable damage"
to a fishing sector that has tried hard to get back to work, an
industry source in the Fukushima Prefecture city of Iwaki said. The
evaporation proposal has fueled similar worries in farming and ranching
circles, according to a source in the rice-growing business.
"The central government should understand the situation on the ground" and
thoroughly consider its response, the source said. Even so, it appears
that despite "considereding the situation on the ground", the government
is still set to go ahead with the discharge anyway.
Why? The reason may also be the simplest one - money. According to the Nikkei,
discharging the water into the Pacific is generally seen by experts as
the most logical option. Evaporation was successfully used for cleanup
after the 1979 Three Mile Island disaster in the U.S. But releasing
water into the sea would cost less and, by ministry estimates, cut
radiation exposure by more than half compared with evaporation. Of
course, this is the same ministry which for months lied about the full
extent of the fallout caused by the Fukushima disaster. Surely this time
they are telling the truth.
The recommendation needs to be confirmed by the head of the panel,
Nagoya University Professor Emeritus Ichiro Yamamoto, and submitted to
the government at a later date, which has not been set, but a hard
deadline looms as the government is running out of time to make a
decision. The roughly 1,000 tanks on the Fukushima Daiichi site held
1.18 million tons of water as of Dec. 12, not far from the total
capacity of 1.37 million. Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co.
Holdings expects to run out of space around 2022.
Even before then, the most important task in decommissioning the
plant - removing spent nuclear fuel - is set to begin in 2021 at reactor
No. 2. The tanks take up space that will be needed for this work.
污染海洋, 使人類食物污染!
回覆刪除日本呢下慢性謀殺全球,無國家講,先搞笑
回覆刪除真新聞無人講, 假新聞就多多都有.......
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