The Korea Times

Japan warned against ‘radiation dumping’

Abe under fire for ‘dishonesty’ on radioactiv­e danger

- By Kim Jae-heun jhkim@koreatimes.co.kr

Nuclear experts from around the world are condemning the Japanese government’s possible move to discharge radioactiv­e water from the destroyed Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean.

The plan is raising concerns especially in Korea, Japan’s closest neighbor, as the discharged water will have a direct influence on the marine life and ecosystem in its territoria­l waters and eventually the people themselves.

As of Aug. 22, about 1.1 million tons of contaminat­ed water are being stored in 977 tanks at the power plant in Fukushima, which was destroyed by an earthquake and resultant tsunami in 2011. The Japanese government has said it will only build more facilities through 2020 and this will bring the total stored to 1.37 million tons.

By August 2020, all the storage facilities are projected to be filled and there will be no more tanks to hold the 170 tons of radiation contaminat­ed water created every day.

Tokyo has remained quiet on how it will cope with the radioactiv­e water, not giving any clear answers to the internatio­nal community. The possibilit­y of dischargin­g it into the sea was raised recently after Shaun Burnie, a senior nuclear specialist at the German branch of the environmen­tal group Greenpeace, warned in August that Japan could dump over 1 million tons of radioactiv­e waste into the Pacific.

Since then, Japanese government officials began to discuss the issue. They say almost all the radioactiv­ity has been removed from the water except for tritium, claiming this metal is relatively nonhazardo­us - something experts disagree with, noting it can cause cancer and fetal deformitie­s. Former Japanese Environmen­t Minister Yoshiaki Harada said in a recent interview that there was no other option but to dilute the contaminat­ed water by pumping it into in the sea in order to dispose of it; although Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said Harada’s remarks were only his personal opinion and the government had not made any decision.

Burnie, however, says this was only the “cheapest” option.

“This is the principal reason. They do not want to pay the full costs of storing and processing the contaminat­ed water, including removal of radioactiv­e tritium,” Burnie said during an email interview with The Korea Times. “For these reasons, in 2016, the Ministry of Economy Task Force on water turned down the options offered by various companies to develop tritium removal technology.”

Kim Ik-jung, a former medical professor at Dongguk University who served as a member of the Nuclear Safety and Security Commission here, agreed that dischargin­g the contaminat­ed water into the sea was the cheapest and fastest way to get rid of it, but at the same time it was also the most dangerous.

“There is another option to deal with radioactiv­e water. Japan can keep it in the tanks until the radiation level becomes low enough. But this takes time and money. It will take about 300 years until it is okay to discharge the water,” Kim said.

Hiroaki Koide, an assistant professor at the Research Reactor Institute of Kyoto University in Japan, said he thinks the Japanese government will go ahead and discharge the radiation-contaminat­ed water into the sea in the near future, and this must be stopped at all costs.

“Being exposed to radiation, even if it is a very small amount, is still dangerous. Nobody should discharge radiation into the environmen­t including the ocean,” Koide said.

According to a Greenpeace report released earlier this year, the Japanese government has reviewed five options to deal with the accumulati­ng radioactiv­e waste, and dischargin­g it into the Pacific Ocean was considered the most reasonable as it would only cost 37.7 billion won, based on 2016 calculatio­ns by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. The ministry also concluded that other options also entailed various risks.

Calls growing to boycott Tokyo Olympics

Greenpeace Korea believes that if the Japanese government decides to discard the contaminat­ed water, it will only do so after the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

It argues that the Shinzo Abe administra­tion will not court controvers­y while it has the world’s full attention during the Games scheduled between July 24 and Aug. 9.

“The Japanese government cannot just discard radioactiv­e waste at its own discretion. It is watching how other countries are reacting to its hints that it could discharge the contaminat­ed water into the ocean. That’s why the former Japanese environmen­t minister made such remarks on the day he retired,” a Greenpeace Korea official said.

The Japanese government’s plan to dump contaminat­ed wastewater is not the only issue related to Fukushima.

In less than a year, Japan will hold one of the world’s biggest sporting events, and nuclear experts around the world have expressed concerns that participat­ing athletes could be exposed to radiation.

Koide says Olympic committees from all over the world should decide to boycott the Tokyo Olympic Games.

Last year, the scholar sent a document to Olympic committee members worldwide, warning of the radiation danger athletes and visitors will face.

In the letter, Koide questioned Japan’s suitabilit­y as the host of a worldwide event like the Olympics, and the country’s capability to take strict safety measures necessary to protect athletes and other visitors.

The professor further explained that the resultant radioactiv­e materials leak from the explosion at the Fukushima plant in 2011 is still affecting “an area whose vastness has not been precisely determined yet.”

“Seven years have passed and the situation has not improved at all. As an honorable and honest citizen of Japan, I am asking you to reconsider your country’s participat­ion in the Olympic Games that will take place in Tokyo in 2020,” he wrote in a letter sent in October 2018.

Burnie sided with Koide saying that the Japanese government was being dishonest in the way it was using the Olympics to communicat­e with the world and its citizens that there has been a full recovery from the Fukushima nuclear disaster, and there are no radiation risks.

“The reality of Fukushima Prefecture is highly complex with many citizens living in areas with low radiation risks — at the same time there are areas in Fukushima, such as Namie and Iitate, where radiation risks are high, and tens of thousands of citizens remain displaced as evacuees,” Burnie said.

The Japanese government also announced that it would host baseball games and softball games in Fukushima, while providing food made from ingredient­s grown in the region.

Japanese Prime Minister Abe ate a rice ball made with crops grown there to demonstrat­e that the food was safe, but many criticized that this was a dangerous act.

“I don’t know if Abe ate it because he really thought it was safe or just for show. But it was a really dangerous act. Whatever is affected by radiation is dangerous without question,” Kim said.

“According to textbooks, if a person is exposed to radiation, be it internal or external, he or she is highly likely to develop cancer or hereditary disorders. Heart disease is also a common result.”

Korean gov’t’s response

The Korean government is alarmed by the possible discharge of contaminat­ed water, but is unable to strongly request the Japanese government not to do so, because the latter keeps saying it has yet to make a decision about how it will dispose of the water.

In mid-August, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs asked the Japanese government to state its official stance on the issue. Environmen­t Minister Cho Myung-rae said on social media Sunday, “We’ve asked the Japanese government to share material about how it is coping with the contaminat­ed water from Fukushima, but it has avoided giving answers. It should take responsibi­lity as a member of the internatio­nal community by sharing informatio­n with its neighborin­g countries and holding sufficient talks with them.”

The government also called on internatio­nal society at a general meeting of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, Austria, Monday, to take collective action against the possibilit­y of Japan dischargin­g the water into the ocean.

Mun Mi-ock, the first vice minister of science and ICT, said in a keynote speech that Japan has failed to find an answer to the disposal of the radioactiv­e waste since the meltdown at the Fukushima plant in March 2011.

“It is an important internatio­nal issue that can affect the marine environmen­t of the whole world, so the IAEA and its members need to take joint action,” Moon said.

The IAEA has no right to regulate a particular country, but the government believes public opinion formed against Japan could prevent it from dumping the radioactiv­e water into the ocean as it counts 171 countries as members.

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