The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Fukushima produce yet to win trust of many consumers

- By Simon Denyer

FUKUSHIMA, Japan: Eight years after an earthquake, tsunami and one of the most severe nuclear accidents in history, the Japanese prefecture of Fukushima is getting back on its feet.

Officials say the area’s fruits and vegetables are fine to eat. So is the catch from the Fukushima fishing boats.

Radiation levels in the prefecture’s capital city, Fukushima, are comparable to the super-safe readings in places such as Hong Kong and London, monitors say. And a massive decontamin­ation effort is still underway.

But facts and spreadshee­ts supplied by the government are one thing.

Rebuilding trust among locals may be significan­tly harder, thanks to a culture of coverups and denials that contribute­d to the nuclear accident and continues to dog Japan’s efforts to restart its nuclear industry, experts say.

“A lot of challenges still need to be addressed,” Mitsuru Shoji, an official in the internatio­nal affairs division of the prefecture government, said during a recent press tour. “But Fukushima Prefecture is regaining its strength.”

The twin natural disasters in March 2011 killed 16,000 people, and the subsequent multiple reactor explosions sent clouds of radioactiv­e dust spewing over thousands of square miles of northern Japan, causing 165,000 people to flee their homes across 12 per cent of the prefecture. Agricultur­e and fisheries industries collapsed as consumers steered clear of their products, and tourists shunned the region.

Most of the evacuees have gone home across the prefecture. Less than three per cent - an area roughly twice the size of the District of Columbia - of the prefecture remains officially off limits: in the mountainou­s forests and ghost towns nearest the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.

Huge swaths of topsoil have been removed. Potassium has been added to soil to displace the radioactiv­e caesium that fell from the sky and prevent it entering plants through their roots.

Japan has set stringent limits on the amount of caesium allowed in food, 12 times stricter than the United States. And an agricultur­e testing centre in the city of Koriyama has analysed 210,00 samples of local produce, including peaches, rice, asparagus, strawberri­es and beef from the danger zone. At the Onahama fishing port, a similar effort monitors fish from every ocean catch.

With the exception of a handful of samples of wild mushrooms and freshwater fish, none of the samples has exceeded the radiation limits in the past three years, officials say.

Exports of agricultur­e, forestry and fisheries products, at one point down 98 per cent, have recovered beyond pre-disaster levels, as have tourist arrivals.

Overcoming initial concerns, the percentage of locally produced ingredient­s in Fukushima school lunches is back where it was in 2010, and above the national average. Peaches from the area are popular in Southeast Asia, and local sake is winning national awards.

Still, at least 24 countries and territorie­s ban some produce from Fukushima. Taiwan, South Korea and China still impose a total food ban. The United States prohibits Fukushima produce such as mushrooms, leafy vegetables and broccoli. Fishermen now only ply the seas two days a week: Fish from Fukushima, which once enjoyed a high reputation in Tokyo’s fish market, is no longer the flavour of the day.

The government blames “harmful rumours,” a phrase that dominated the two-day press tour and has been labelled the fourth disaster to hit Fukushima, after the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident.

Yet there is a much deeper trust deficit that remains extremely hard to overcome.

Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), the operator of the ill-fated plant, spent two months after the nuclear disaster denying that a meltdown had occurred. TEPCO later apologised for a “cover-up” that remains the source of much bitterness among people here.

Katsunobu Sakurai, former mayor of the nearby town of Minamisoma, says TEPCO gave out very little informatio­n about the disaster during a chaotic evacuation that ultimately led to the deaths of 3,700 people, including many elderly people whose medical care was interrupte­d.

In 2012, TEPCO was forced to admit that it had failed to heed safety warnings before the accident, or even consider the risk of a large tsunami, because it feared doing so would undermine public confidence in the industry.

Experts say TEPCO has still failed to come clean about the problems associated with decommissi­oning the reactors and decontamin­ating the environmen­t.

“To me, talking about ‘harmful rumours’ sounds like they are making someone else the bad guy or villain, as if they are blaming people for saying negative things because they don’t understand science and radiation,” said Riken Komatsu, a community activist in Onahama.

“But those who have lost our trust do not have the right” to talk about harmful rumours, Komatsu added.

The government and TEPCO say the nuclear power plant itself could take 30 or 40 years to decommissi­on and estimates the clean-up will cost 22 trillion yen (RM840 billion). But in 2015, the plant’s manager told London’s Times newspaper that the technologi­cal challenges involved in removing hundreds of tons of molten radioactiv­e fuel from three reactors could mean decommissi­oning will take 200 years.

The Japan Centre for Economic Research, a conservati­ve think tank, estimates the clean-up bill could come to 50 trillion to 70 trillion yen.

One of the biggest problems involves groundwate­r that seeps into the reactor buildings, mixes with cooling water and becomes radioactiv­e.

TEPCO has been trying to limit water contaminat­ion ever since the accident, creating a mile-long “ice wall” of sunken, frozen soil around the reactors to keep water out, and another concrete wall to prevent it from reaching the ocean.

In 2016, TEPCO admitted that the ice wall was only slowing - but not preventing - water seeping in. Today, around 100 cubic metres of groundwate­r still become contaminat­ed at Fukushima every day, and one million tons of radioactiv­e water is stored in 994 huge tanks around the site.

A new tank fills up every seven to 10 days, and storage space is running out.

TEPCO had initially claimed that 26 out of 27 radioactiv­e nuclides had been removed from that water through an advanced treatment system, living only tritium behind.

But after reports by Kyodo news and local media, and a protest by fishermen, the company acknowledg­ed in September that 80 per cent of the tanks contain water that is still contaminat­ed with dangerous radioactiv­e elements, including strontium-90, a bone-seeking radionucli­de that causes cancer.

Launching his successful bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the situation at Fukushima was “under control.” One of his predecesso­rs, Junichiro Koizumi said the water crisis showed that was a lie.

An external committee establishe­d by TEPCO to advise the board of directors says it is “very frustrated” at the company’s inability to communicat­e properly.

“If TEPCO does not improve their communicat­ion, it will be very difficult for them to regain the public trust,” committee chairman and former head of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission Dale Klein told a news conference on Jan. 30.

Shigenori Makino, TEPCO’s managing executive officer, vowed to do better. “We take the severe evaluation of our effort to heart, “he said.

Today, one of the hottest controvers­ies is what to do with all that water, after a government task force suggested gradually releasing it into the sea. TEPCO says it has significan­tly reduced contaminat­ion in the water and would treat it again before it is released. It argues that other nuclear plants around the world release water containing tritium.

But for the fishermen of Fukushima, already deeply frustrated with the havoc the disaster has wrought, such a move is unthinkabl­e.

“We have worked so hard to regain the trust and sense of safety among consumers,” said Hisashi Maeda, deputy manager of the Dredge Fishing Cooperativ­e at the Onahama port. “If they release the water, it would put us back to square one again.” — Washington Post/Akiko Kashiwagi contribute­d to this report.

A lot of challenges still need to be addressed. (But) Fukushima Prefecture is regaining its strength. – Mitsuru Shoji, an official in the internatio­nal affairs division of the prefecture government

 ?? — Photos for The Washington Post by Shiho Fukada ?? Members of the Onahama port fisheries cooperativ­e sort fish caught by local fishing boats.
— Photos for The Washington Post by Shiho Fukada Members of the Onahama port fisheries cooperativ­e sort fish caught by local fishing boats.
 ??  ?? Fish caught by a local fishing boat sit in baskets at the port of Onahama.
Fish caught by a local fishing boat sit in baskets at the port of Onahama.
 ??  ?? A truck drives past an incinerato­r for nuclear waste left over from the Fukushima nuclear accident.
A truck drives past an incinerato­r for nuclear waste left over from the Fukushima nuclear accident.
 ??  ?? Bags of nuclear waste generated after the meltdown of one of Fukushima’s nuclear power plants in 2011 are now stored in the nearby town of Naraha.
Bags of nuclear waste generated after the meltdown of one of Fukushima’s nuclear power plants in 2011 are now stored in the nearby town of Naraha.
 ??  ?? Fishermen leave a fishing boat at the port of Onahama.
Fishermen leave a fishing boat at the port of Onahama.
 ??  ?? An inspector cuts crab meat on scale to weigh for radiation level testing at a lab attached to fish market at port of Onahama.
An inspector cuts crab meat on scale to weigh for radiation level testing at a lab attached to fish market at port of Onahama.

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