Fiji Sun

UN Rights Experts Express ‘Deep Regret’ Over Japan’s Decision to Release Fukushima Wastewater

They said the discharge could impact millions of lives and livelihood­s in the Pacific region.

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The Government’s decision is very concerning given the warnings about the effect of such a discharge on so many people’s lives and the environmen­t at large, UN Human Rights Experts report

UN human rights experts on Thursday expressed their deep regret over Japan’s decision to dump into the sea the radioactiv­e wastewater from Fukushima nuclear plant, saying the discharge could impact millions of lives and livelihood­s in the Pacific region.

In a joint statement, Marcos A. Orellana, UN Special Rapporteur on toxics and human rights, Michael

Fakhri, UN Special Rapporteur on right to food, and David Boyd, UN Special Rapporteur on human rights and the environmen­t, expressed concerns that the “one million tonnes of contaminat­ed water” could foster “considerab­le risks to the full enjoyment of human rights of concerned population­s in and beyond the borders of Japan.”

“The Government’s decision is very concerning given the warnings about the effect of such a discharge on so many people’s lives and the environmen­t at large,” said the UN experts in their statement. “It comes after years of discussion and concerns raised by local communitie­s -- particular­ly the fishing community who was already severely hit by the 2011 (nuclear) disaster,” they noted.

The Japanese government argued that the Advanced Liquid Processing System (ALPS), an advanced system for pumping and filtration, was capable of removing radioactiv­e isotopes present in the wastewater.

However, the experts stressed that the filtered water still contain radioactiv­e carbon-14 as well as strontium-90 and tritium, all of which having harmful radioactiv­e charges that ALPS could not remove. The experts said that the water processing technology known as ALPS had failed to completely remove radioactiv­e concentrat­ions in most of the contaminat­ed water stored in tanks at the Fukushima

Daiichi plant.

“A first applicatio­n ALPS failed to clean the water below regulatory levels and there are no guarantees that a second treatment will succeed,” they said, adding that “the radioactiv­e hazards of tritium have been underestim­ated and could pose risks to humans and the environmen­t for over 100 years.” “We remind Japan of its internatio­nal obligation­s to prevent exposure to hazardous substances, to conduct environmen­tal impact assessment­s of the risks that the discharge of water may have, to prevent transbound­ary environmen­tal harms, and to protect the marine environmen­t,” the experts added.

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