Fukushima: Anxiety and Anger Over Japan’s Nuclear Waste Water Plan
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Fukushima: Anxiety and Anger Over Japan’s Nuclear Waste Water Plan

BBC

APLN member Tatsujiro Suzuki, Vice Director and Professor of the Research Center for Nuclear Weapons Abolition at Nagasaki University, was quoted in the BBC stating that Japan’s nuclear water release plan would “not necessarily lead to serious pollution or readily harm the public – if everything goes well.” However, considering Tepco’s failure to prevent the 2011 disaster, he remains concerned about the possibility of an accidental release of contaminated water.

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UN-appointed human rights experts have opposed the plan, as have environmental activists. Greenpeace has released reports casting doubt on Tepco’s treatment process, alleging it does not go far enough in removing radioactive substances.

Critics say Japan should, for the time being, keep the treated water in the tanks. They argue this buys time to develop new processing technologies, and allow any remaining radioactivity to naturally reduce.

There are also some scientists who are uncomfortable with the plan. They say it requires more studies on how it would affect the ocean bed and marine life.

“We’ve seen an inadequate radiological, ecological impact assessment that makes us very concerned that Japan would not only be unable to detect what’s getting into the water, sediment and organisms, but if it does, there is no recourse to remove it… there’s no way to get the genie back in the bottle,” marine biologist Robert Richmond, a professor with the University of Hawaii, told the BBC’s Newsday programme.

Tatsujiro Suzuki, a nuclear engineering professor from Nagasaki University’s Research Center for Nuclear Weapons Abolition, told the BBC the plan would “not necessarily lead to serious pollution or readily harm the public – if everything goes well”.

But given that Tepco failed to prevent the 2011 disaster, he remains concerned about a potential accidental release of contaminated water, he said.

Image: South Korean activists have criticised Japan’s plan, saying it will contaminate the ocean/Getty 
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