China Daily

Fukushima plan triggers fresh anger

As water-dumping moves advance, S. Koreans seek firm regional stance

- By YANG HAN in Hong Kong kelly@chinadaily­apac.com

Japan’s plan to dump radioactiv­e wastewater from the stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant will endanger the lives of people in the Asia-Pacific region, say experts who want to see stepped-up efforts against the ocean disposal from the countries most at risk.

South Koreans have been among those expressing their opposition to the plan, and voices have again been raised after Japan moved a step closer to implementi­ng its planned discharge of the nuclear-contaminat­ed water from next year, following the recent approval of the plan’s details by the nation’s nuclear regulator.

“The discharge of wastewater from Fukushima is an act of contaminat­ing the Pacific Ocean as well as the sea area of South Korea,” said Ahn Jae-hun, energy and climate change director at the Korea Federation for Environmen­t Movement, an advocacy group in Seoul.

“Many people in South Korea believe that Japan’s discharge of the Fukushima wastewater is a wrong policy that threatens the safety of both the sea and humans,” Ahn told China Daily.

Last month, Japan’s nuclear regulator approved the plan to discharge wastewater into the Pacific Ocean from the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, after it built up a huge amount of radiation-tainted water. The water has been collected and stored in tanks following efforts to cool down the reactors after an earthquake and tsunami struck Japan in 2011.

The dumping plan has drawn fierce opposition from government officials and civic groups in South Korea, one of the world’s major consumers of seafood.

On Aug 1, South Korea’s Minister of Oceans and Fisheries Cho Seunghwan said the government is considerin­g whether to take the issue to the Internatio­nal Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, Yonhap News Agency reported. Cho said the government’s primary plan is to prevent Japan from releasing the contaminat­ed water. “We do not accept the release plan”, he said.

Ahn said radioactiv­e materials can generate long-term effects and it remains unclear how they will affect the marine ecosystem.

Though the South Korean government is considerin­g taking the issue to the internatio­nal tribunal, Ahn said it will be difficult to quantify the potential damage.

South Korea has said it will conduct a thorough analysis and revision of the impact of Japan’s plan, but the government has not received enough data from Japan to conduct such research, South Korea’s Hankyoreh newspaper reported in June.

After Japan’s nuclear regulator approved the Fukushima discharge plan, South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol said Tokyo needs to transparen­tly explain and gain consent from neighborin­g countries before releasing the contaminat­ed water.

Potential impact

Shaun Burnie, a senior nuclear specialist with Greenpeace Germany, said the environmen­tal group is concerned about the potential impact of the water’s release on the wider Asia-Pacific region.

The level of exposure depends on multiple variables including the concentrat­ion in seawater and how quickly it concentrat­es, disperses and dilutes, forms of life, and the type of radionucli­de released and how that disperses or concentrat­es as it moves through the environmen­t, Burnie said.

“The concentrat­ions are of direct relevance to those who may consume them, including marine species like fish and, ultimately, humans,” Burnie told China Daily.

Noting that the Fukushima contaminat­ed water issue comes under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea as it is a form of pollution to internatio­nal waters, Burnie said there are strong grounds for individual countries to file a legal challenge against Japan’s plan.

Ahn said joint expression­s of opposition in the region could force the Japanese government to choose a safe method to deal with the wastewater instead of dumping it into the sea. China is also among the neighborin­g countries that have voiced opposition to the Fukushima discharge plan.

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