Global Times

Consumers worried about Japan’s plan for nuclear wastewater

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Japan’s imminent decision to discharge radioactiv­e wastewater into the ocean sparked widespread backlash from many Chinese consumers, who expressed concerns that the move could affect seafood safety.

Following news reports of Japan’s move to dump the wastewater from the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant into the ocean, some Chinese consumers took to social media to register their opposition, calling the move a disaster for humankind.

“If nuclear wastewater is discharged into the sea, the seafood market will surely suffer heavy losses several years later, which maybe a devastatin­g blow!” a user wrote on Twitter- liked Sina Weibo on Sunday.

“I’m concerned that the seafood in the Pacific Ocean, not just around Japan, would be contaminat­ed, and that it will have an adverse effect on the human body,” a Beijing resident surnamed Yang told the Global Times on Monday.

Another Beijing resident named Wang Ying told the Global Times that she is worried the seafood will become cancerogen­ic after being contaminat­ed by the nuclear wastewater.

According to a post by the official Weibo account of ntv. cn, China’s agricultur­e film and television center, the total catch from China’s deepsea fishing is about 2 million tons each year, and nearly two- thirds of that is caught around the Pacific Rim, making the decision closely bound up with China’s fishery industry.

The news also led some netizens to embrace freshwater fish, a prospect that lifted shares of freshwater fish companies listed on Chinese stock markets.

For instance, share price of leading freshwater aquacultur­e specialist Dahu Aquacultur­e Co increased 10.06 percent on Monday.

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