Penticton Herald

No adverse effects from nuclear disaster

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VANCOUVER — Seven years after the Fukushima nuclear accident in Japan released radioactiv­e elements into the environmen­t, researcher­s say those elements pose minimal risk to human or salmon health along British Columbia’s coast.

A team of researcher­s at Simon Fraser University’s nuclear science lab collected soil and salmon samples from the Quesnel and Harrison rivers and used a high-resolution gamma-ray spectrosco­py to search for signs of radioactiv­e isotopes.

The isotopes — Cesium 134 and 137 — are fission fragments that do not exist in nature and, therefore, can be directly attributed to nuclear reactions.

Lead chemist Krzysztof Starosta says that while they found evidence of the isotopes in both soil and salmon, the levels measured were very low.

The team belgieves some of the lingering isotopes date back to 1960s nuclear weapons testing and the 1986 Chernobyl explosion.

“The levels found in both the salmon and soil samples remained below Canada’s safety guidelines, posing minimal risk to B.C.’s salmon and human population­s,” Starosta said in a release.

He said it has been a relief to know the effects on the region have been so small, even if that was expected given Western Canada’s distance from Japan.

“Proximity to a nuclear disaster is critical, but wind and weather patterns that carry airborne radioisoto­pes should also be of concerns. Wherever these radioisoto­pes land, they will eventually decay and release some degree of radiation,” he said.

The team’s findings were published in the Canadian Journal of Chemistry.

The Fukushima disaster occurred March 11, 2011, when a tsunami knocked out power at the seaside Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, causing partial meltdowns in three reactors.

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