China Daily Global Weekly

Wastewater fuels concerns across region

Japan’s ocean disposal a long-term threat to fisherfolk and marine life

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com Leonardus Jegho in Jakarta and Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

Adecision by Japan to dump contaminat­ed water from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea is generating growing anger in Southeast Asia.

While internatio­nal outrage over Japan’s plan has focused mostly on the fears of people in China and South Korea, awareness of the dangers posed by the release of more than 1 million metric tons of the contaminat­ed water is mounting farther south.

Commentato­rs across Southeast Asia are highlighti­ng the threat to coastal communitie­s and marine biodiversi­ty. “The seas are a fluid environmen­t that cannot be bordered up by any means,” said Serina Abdul Rahman, visiting fellow at ISEASYusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

She said that while the area from which Japan will dump the contaminat­ed water “is quite a distance away”, it will only be a matter of time before this discharge will eventually flow into Southeast Asian seas.

“With extreme weather conditions, that we get more frequently now, anything in the sediment and substrate can get churned up and flow with the currents,” Serina said.

She said that wastewater discharge will harm not just the maritime environmen­t and migratory birds and animals. The dumping of contaminat­ed water also threatens public health as it can contaminat­e seafood. Fisherfolk will also lose their livelihood in the process.

Renato Redentor Constantin­o, executive director of Manila-based think tank Institute for Climate and Sustainabl­e Cities, said releasing radioactiv­e water will affect not just Japan but its neighbors in the region as well, as they all share maritime borders. He urged Japan to stop dumping its “gross failure to curb the avarice and recklessne­ss of its nuclear industry on its neighbors, future generation­s, and the fragile ecosystems we all share”.

Naderev Sano, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said Japan’s decision “completely disregards” human rights and internatio­nal maritime law.

“This completely ignores the human rights and interests of the people in Fukushima, wider Japan and the Asia-Pacific region. Japan is known to have a much higher capacity, and more robust risk management systems, monitoring systems, enforcemen­t capacity, and technology,” Sano said at an April 22 briefing.

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said on April 13 that his government has decided to discharge contaminat­ed

wastewater in Fukushima Prefecture into the sea.

The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant has been generating massive amounts of radiation-tainted water since 2011, after a 9.0 magnitude earthquake hit the northeaste­rn coast of Japan and triggered a powerful tsunami. The plant’s three nuclear reactors melted down after the tsunami destroyed their cooling system.

Tokyo Electric Power Company, the plant’s operator, pumped seawater into the reactor cores to cool them and keep them from melting. Since then, TEPCO has stored 1.25 million tons of wastewater in tanks.

The water, according to reports, has been treated using an advanced liquid processing system, to remove most contaminan­ts. But things like tritium,

a radioactiv­e byproduct of nuclear reactors, are proving hard to filter out.

The decision drew a swift response from China. Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian urged Japan to reconsider its plan and cooperate with other countries to conduct assessment­s on the water.

On April 26, another ministry spokesman, Wang Wenbin, said experts from China will be invited to join a technical working group led by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, that will look into Japan’s contaminat­ed water disposal plan.

“China is in close communicat­ion and coordinati­on with the IAEA over the issue,” Wang said, adding China will fully support the nuclear agency’s follow-up work.

Philippine Presidenti­al Spokespers­on Harry Roque reminded Japan of

“the principles of internatio­nal environmen­tal law”.

“First principle is that we are one ecosystem, second principle is we are interconne­cted, and the third principle is that the polluter must pay,” Roque said on April 15.

Riko Kurniawan, director of the Riau Province’s office of the Indonesian Forum for the Environmen­t, is calling on the Indonesian government to provide more informatio­n on Japan’s dumping of wastewater.

Antonio Oposa Jr, an environmen­tal lawyer from the Philippine­s, urged the Philippine government to also “do something about it (because) that is something that is not just illegal, but very dangerous to the country”.

 ?? YONHAP NEWS AGENCY ?? South Korean fishing boats converge off Tongyeong, South Gyeongsang, on April 26 in a protest against Japan’s decision to dump contaminat­ed water into the sea.
YONHAP NEWS AGENCY South Korean fishing boats converge off Tongyeong, South Gyeongsang, on April 26 in a protest against Japan’s decision to dump contaminat­ed water into the sea.

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