The Borneo Post

Mutations, DNA damage seen in Fukushima forests — Greenpeace

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TOKYO: Conservati­on group Greenpeace warned yesterday that the environmen­tal impact of the Fukushima nuclear crisis five years ago on nearby forests is just beginning to be seen and will remain a source of contaminat­ion for years to come.

The March 11, 2011 magnitude 9.0 undersea earthquake off Japan’s northeaste­rn coast sparked a massive tsunami that swamped cooling systems and triggered reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

Radiation spread over a wide area and forced tens of thousands of people from their homes — many of whom will likely never return — in the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986.

As the fi fth anniversar­y of the disaster approaches, Greenpeace said signs of mutations in trees and DNA- damaged worms were beginning to appear, while ‘ vast stocks of radiation’ mean that forests cannot be decontamin­ated.

In a report, Greenpeace cited “apparent increases in growth mutations of fi r trees... heritable mutations in pale blue grass butterfly population­s” as well as “DNA- damaged worms in highly contaminat­ed areas”, it said.

The report came as the government intends to lift many evacuation orders in villages around the Fukushima plant by March 2017, if its massive decontamin­ation effort progresses as it hopes.

For now, only residentia­l areas are being cleaned in the shortterm, and the worst-hit parts of the countrysid­e are being omitted, a recommenda­tion made by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

But such selective efforts will confine returnees to a relatively small area of their old hometowns, while the strategy could lead to re- contaminat­ion as woodlands will act as a radiation reservoir, with pollutants washed out by rains, Greenpeace warned.

The conservati­on group said its report relies largely on research published in peer-reviewed internatio­nal journals.

But “most of the findings in it have never been covered outside of the close circles of academia”, report author Kendra Ulrich told AFP.

The Japanese government’s push to resettle contaminat­ed areas and also restart nuclear reactors in Japan that had been shut down in the aftermath of the crisis are a cause for concern, Ulrich said, stressing it and the IAEA are using the opportunit­y of the anniversar­y to play down radiation impacts.

“In the interest of human rights — especially for victims of the disaster — it is ever more urgent to ensure accurate and complete informatio­n is publicly available and the misleading rhetoric of these entities challenged,” she said.

Scientists, including a researcher who found mutations of Fukushima butterflie­s, have warned, however, that more data are needed to determine the ultimate impact of the Fukushima accident on animals in general.

Researcher­s and medical doctors have so far denied that the accident at Fukushima would cause an elevated incidence of cancer or leukaemia, diseases that are often associated with radiation exposure.

But they also noted that long-term medical examinatio­n is needed especially due to concerns over thyroid cancer among young people — a particular problem for people following the Chernobyl catastroph­e. — AFP

 ??  ?? A volunteer feeds swans in an area destroyed by the March 11, 2011 tsunami inside the exclusion zone in Okuma, near Tokyo Electric Power Co’s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. — Reuters photo
A volunteer feeds swans in an area destroyed by the March 11, 2011 tsunami inside the exclusion zone in Okuma, near Tokyo Electric Power Co’s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. — Reuters photo

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