Khaleej Times

Fukushima produce difficult to sell

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koriyama — The pumpkin is diced, the chicken carved and the eggs beaten into an omelette, but the people preparing the food are not chefs — they are scientists testing produce from Japan’s Fukushima region.

Seven years after the March 2011 nuclear disaster caused by a devastatin­g tsunami, rigorous testing shows no radioactiv­e threat from Fukushima’s produce, officials and experts say. But local producers say they still face crippling suspicion from consumers.

More than 205,000 food items have been tested at the Fukushima Agricultur­al Technology Centre since March 2011, with Japan setting a standard of no more than 100 becquerels of radioactiv­ity per kilogramme (Bq/kg).

The European Union, by comparison, sets that level at 1,250 Bq/kg and the US at 1,200.

In the last year, the centre says no cultivated produce or farm reared livestock has exceeded the government’s limit.

In all just nine samples out of tens of thousands were over the limit: eight from fish bred in inland ponds, and one a sample of wild mushrooms.

Each day, more than 150 samples are prepared, coded, weighed, and then passed through a “germanium semiconduc­tor detector”. Rice undergoes screening elsewhere.

While radiation affected several

regions which have their own testing processes, Fukushima’s programme is the most systematic, testament to the particular­ly severe reputation­al damage it suffered.

In the wake of the nuclear disaster, a wide-scale decontamin­ation programme has been carried out in Fukushima.

It can’t be done in forests, where thick tree growth makes it impractica­l. But elsewhere topsoil has been removed, trees washed down and potassium sprinkled to reduce caesium uptake. But the testing process is the cornerston­e of efforts to win consumer trust.

“Some people are still worried, in Japan and abroad, so we want to continue to explain to people in other prefecture­s and in foreign countries that our products are safe,” said Kenji Kusano, an official at the testing centre. And occasional­ly radioactiv­ity is detected, for example in wild plants and mushrooms, which are destroyed if they exceed the government standard. Kusano said testing will remain important as residents gradually return.

“When residents come back to areas that are off-limits at the moment and start producing their own fruit and vegetables, they must be tested,” he said. The Fukushima disaster devastated a previously flourishin­g local agricultur­al sector. “Profits have not yet reached pre-2011 levels and prices remain below the national average,” said Fukushima representa­tive Nobuhide Takahashi.

The situation is even worse for fisherman, many of whom have survived only on compensati­on paid by Fukushima operator TEPCO.

The tsunami destroyed ports across the region and demand is low despite an even stricter testing standard of 50Bq/kg for Fukushima’s seafood. “When we catch fish and send it to market in Tokyo, some people don’t want to buy it,” said Kazunori Yoshida, director of Iwaki’s fishing cooperativ­e. As a result, fishermen brought in just 3,200 tonnes of seafood in the area last year, down from 24,700 in 2010.

The problem remains one of perception, despite the fact that independen­t testing confirms what government labs show.

The Minna no Data (Our Data) NGO carries out its own testing and spokesman Hidetake Ishimaru said the group was “very surprised” by the “mostly very low levels” it found in Fukushima produce. —

 ?? AFP ?? Onahama Port employees preparing seafood for radiation tests in Iwaki. —
AFP Onahama Port employees preparing seafood for radiation tests in Iwaki. —

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