Los Angeles Times

Threat from plutonium downplayed

Levels found near the Fukushima plant probably pose little risk, a study says.

- Amina Khan amina.khan@latimes.com Times staff writer Ralph Vartabedia­n contribute­d to this report.

The levels of radioactiv­e plutonium around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant aren’t much higher than the amount of plutonium remaining in the environmen­t from Cold Warera nuclear weapons tests, and it probably poses little threat to humans, a new study indicates.

The paper, published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports, provides the first definitive evidence of plutonium from the accident entering the environmen­t, the authors say. It examines the area within a roughly 20-mile radius of the plant and details the concentrat­ion of plutonium isotopes deposited there after explosions ripped open multiple reactors.

At the three sites examined, the levels for certain isotope ratios were about double those attributed to residual fallout from abovegroun­d nuclear tests conducted by the U.S. and former Soviet Union at the dawn of the Cold War.

The study comes days before the anniversar­y of the magnitude 9 earthquake and resulting tsunami last year that devastated northeaste­rn Japan, leaving more than 27,000 people dead or missing and billions of dollars in damage. Experts in nuclear safety and disaster preparedne­ss are using the occasion to weigh in with reports detailing the lessons learned in the last year.

In the area around the Fukushima plant, preliminar­y testing hadn’t turned up signs of new plutonium isotopes in the soil. Unlike cesium-137 and other radioactiv­e isotopes, plutonium

In terms of building safer reactors, ‘I think we have quite a bit of informatio­n right now … to make regulatory decisions.’

— William Ostendorff,

NRC Commission­er

can’t vaporize and travel through the air. But it’s possible the force of the hydrogen explosions blew out a little plutonium in the form of particulat­e matter.

Plutonium isotopes can’t pass through skin, but if ingested, they can be very damaging to humans.

Lead author Jian Zheng of the National Institute of Radiologic­al Sciences in Chiba, Japan, and his colleagues analyzed soil samples looking for several plutonium isotopes that are produced during the power plants’ nuclear reactions. Plutonium-241, for example, has a half-life of about 14 years, which means it takes 14 years for half of it to decay into other elements. But plutonium-239 has a half-life of 24,100 years.

Since the weapons tests that produced the global background radiation began in the 1940s, the amount of plutonium-241 that can be traced to them should be low in comparison to the amount of residual plutonium-239. But near Fukushima, the researcher­s found that the ratio of plutonium-241 to plutonium-239 was much higher than expected. They said it was a clear sign that fresh plutonium must have been deposited in the area.

According to Zheng, the amount of plutonium-241 re-leased from the power plant was about 1/10,000th that from the 1986 Chernobyl accident in Ukraine.

“It’s an interestin­g detective story,” said Michael Ketterer, a scientist at Northern Arizona University who has studied Chernobyl radiation but was not involved in this study. “I find the results to be fairly convincing.”

Robert Alvarez, who has served as a senior policy advisor in the U.S. Energy Department, said he would have been surprised if researcher­s had not found evidence of plutonium contaminat­ion near the plant.

“They were irradiatin­g plutonium in Unit 3, which experience­d the biggest explosion,” he said.

In fact, the explosion was so massive that investigat­ors found fuel rod fragments a mile away, leading to speculatio­n that a supercriti­cal fission event may have also occurred, Alvarez said.

Still, “Fukushima was no Chernobyl,” said Dale Klein, aformer Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman and coauthor of a report on Fukushima for the American Nuclear Society. That report says the long-term health risks of the radioactiv­e fallout probably would be minimal.

The nuclear society’s paper also looked at the mechanical and human errors that contribute­d to the partial nuclear meltdown. The authors determined that the plant’s design had not accounted for the risks of the region. On the most basic level, the 19-foot-high seawall had not been designed to withstand a tsunami that at points was 49 feet high.

NRC Commission­er William Ostendorff agreed, noting that the tsunami wiped out the plant’s power systems, starting a domino effect.

With no energy to pump coolant to them, the reactors overheated. When the nuclear fuel’s protective zirconium alloy encasement heated up and came into contact with water, the zirconium oxidized and released the hydrogen gas that ultimately exploded, allowing radioactiv­e elements to escape.

The chain reaction highlighte­d the need for a foolproof power system that would allow workers to pump in cooling water and operate valves that would have relieved pressure from the accumulati­ng hydrogen gas.

In terms of building safer reactors, Ostendorff said, “I think we have quite a bit of informatio­n right now … to make regulatory decisions.”

But Alvarez said much remains unknown one year after the disaster. Authoritie­s can’t say exactly where breaches occurred in the reactor vessels and spent fuel pools that caused contaminat­ed water to flood the plant’s lower levels, he said.

The Japanese asserted that they had achieved a “cold shutdown” of the Fukushima site in December, but they will require a stable and permanent infrastruc­ture to keep the situation under control. It is possible, and even likely, that radioactiv­e cooling water is still leaking into the Pacific Ocean, Alvarez said. Cleanup of the immediate site could take four or five decades, he said.

 ?? David Guttenfeld­er
Pool Photo ?? AN OFFICIAL, right, from the Tokyo Electric Power Co., and another man travel past the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. A new study offers evidence that plutonium from last year’s disaster entered the environmen­t.
David Guttenfeld­er Pool Photo AN OFFICIAL, right, from the Tokyo Electric Power Co., and another man travel past the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. A new study offers evidence that plutonium from last year’s disaster entered the environmen­t.

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