The Philippine Star

Japan to flood Pacific with 1 M tons of nuke water

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TOKYO (AP) — The Japanese government is being urged by experts to gradually release radioactiv­e water into the Pacific Ocean more than six years after a tsunami overwhelme­d the Fukushima nuclear power plant.

The water is stored on site in around 900 large and densely packed tanks and could spill should another major disaster strike.

The government has been urged to release the water into the ocean as all the radioactiv­e elements of the water except tritium — which has been said to be safe in small amounts — have been removed through treatment.

But if the tank breaks, the contents may not be able to be controlled.

Local fishermen are extremely hesitant to this solution because many consumers are still uncertain to eat fish caught off Fukushima, despite tests that say the fish is safe to eat.

Today, only about half of the region’s 1,000 fishermen go out and just twice a week because of reduced demand.

Fumio Haga, a drag-net fisherman, said: “People would shun Fukushima fish again as soon as the water is released.”

Lab technician­s mince fish samples at Onahama port in Iwaki, pack them in a cup for inspection and record details such as who caught the fish and where.

Packaged fish then sold at supermarke­ts carry official “safe” stickers.

Only three kinds of fish passed the test when the experiment began in mid-2012, 15 months after the tsunami. Over time, that number has increased to about 100.

The fish meet what is believed to be the world’s most stringent requiremen­t: less than half the radioactiv­e cesium level allowed under Japan’s national standard and one-twelfth of the US or EU limit, said Yoshiharu Nemoto, a senior researcher at the Onahama testing station.

The amount of radioactiv­e water at Fukushima is still growing by 150 tons a day.

 ?? EPA ?? Inspection officers enter the containmen­t vessel of the Unit 5 reactor building at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Futaba on Friday.
EPA Inspection officers enter the containmen­t vessel of the Unit 5 reactor building at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Futaba on Friday.

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