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Fukushima: Radioactivity in Sea up 7.5 Million Times
Marine life contamination well beyond Japan feared
Radioactive iodine-131 readings taken from seawater near the water intake of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant's No. 2 reactor reached 7.5 million times the legal limit, Tokyo Electric Power Co. admitted Tuesday.
Japan's inability to stem the Fukushima leak is worrying fisherman, while Tokyo Electric has insisted radionuclides are being diluted to safe levels in the Pacific. (Photograph: Stephen Morrison/EPA) The sample that yielded the high reading was taken Saturday, before Tepco announced Monday it would start releasing radioactive water into the sea, and experts fear the contamination may spread well beyond Japan's shores to affect seafood overseas.
The unstoppable radioactive discharge into the Pacific has prompted experts to sound the alarm, as cesium, which has a much longer half-life than iodine, is expected to concentrate in the upper food chain.
According to Tepco, some 300,000 becquerels per sq. centimeter of radioactive iodine-131 was detected Saturday, while the amount of cesium-134 was 2 million times the maximum amount permitted and cesium-137 was 1.3 million times the amount allowable.
The amount of iodine-131 dropped to 79,000 becquerels per sq. centimeter Sunday but shot up again Monday to 200,000 becquerels, 5 million times the permissible amount.
The level of radioactive iodine in the polluted water inside reactor 2's cracked storage pit had an even higher concentration. A water sample Saturday had 5.2 million becquerels of iodine per sq. centimeter, or 130 million times the maximum amount allowable, and water leaking from the crack had a reading of 5.4 million becquerels, Tepco said.
"It is a considerably high amount," said Hidehiko Nishiyama, spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.
Masayoshi Yamamoto, a professor of radiology at Kanazawa University, said the high level of cesium is the more worrisome find.
"By the time radioactive iodine is taken in by plankton, which is eaten by smaller fish and then by bigger fish, it will be diluted by the sea and the amount will decrease because of its eight-day half-life," Yamamoto said. "But cesium is a bigger problem."
The half-life of cesium-137 is 30 years, while that for cesium-134 is two years. The longer half-life means it will probably concentrate in the upper food chain.
Yamamoto said such radioactive materials are likely to be detected in fish and other marine products in Japan and other nations in the short and long run, posing a serious threat to the seafood industry in other nations as well.
"All of Japan's sea products will probably be labeled unsafe and other nations will blame Japan if radiation is detected in their marine products," Yamamoto said.
Tepco on Monday began the release into the sea of 11,500 tons of low-level radioactive water to make room to store high-level radiation-polluted water in the No. 2 turbine building. The discharge continued Tuesday.
"It is important to transfer the water in the No. 2 turbine building and store it in a place where there is no leak," Nishiyama of the NISA said. "We want to keep the contamination of the sea to a minimum."
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano apologized for the release of radioactive water into the sea but said it was unavoidable to prevent the spread of higher-level radiation.
Fisheries minister Michihiko Kano said the ministry plans to increase its inspections of fish and other marine products for radiation.
On Monday, 4,080 becquerels per kilogram of radioactive iodine was detected in lance fish caught off Ibaraki Prefecture. Fishermen voluntarily suspended its shipment. The health ministry plans to compile radiation criteria for banning marine products.
Three days after Tepco discovered the crack in the reactor 2 storage pit it still hadn't found the source of the high radiation leak seeping into the Pacific.
Tepco initially believed the leak was somewhere in the cable trench that connects the No. 2 turbine building and the pit. But after using milky white bath salt to trace the flow, which appeared to prove that was not the case, the utility began to think it may be seeping through a layer of small stones below the cable trench.
Information from Kyodo added
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166 Comments so far
Show AllDOH! Darn nuclear waste water.
THE SIIIIIIIIIMMMMMMPSONS.
That was a very inappropriate comparison. The Japanese don't eat doughnuts like the Americans do.
Does anyone else see the EPA raising the allowable levels of radiation in sea water by several million percent?
Well, if Obama and his fellow Republicans don't eliminate the EPA first.
I guess Queer Planet's Simpsons' dialog could be extended to incorporate your EPA idea:
DOH! Darn nuclear waste water. Now we'll have to raise the safe levels again.
THE SIIIIIIIIIMMMMMMPSONS.
Too Cheap to Meter! Clean, Safe, Reliable, Green...oops.
Dai-Ichi is in Meltdown.
The land within x kilometers will become uninhabitable for all creatures great and small in Perpetuity.
The ground water within y kilometers of Dai-Ichi will become irradiated and unusable for drinking and agriculture in Perpetuity.
The air will become irradiated and unfit for breathing in Perpetuity. The rain that passes through the air will become radioactive.
The Sea will become irradiated and unfit for sea life in Perputity. The bounty of the sea will become contaminated and unfit for human use.
Dai-Ichi is a Disaster of unspeakable proportions.
Multiple Nuclear Reactors on the World's most active subduction zone and tsunami zone built by General Electric. Now, how smart is that?!
My heart bleeds for the Victims of this Catastrophe.
What more is there to say?
there is nothing more to say, other than this is just the beginning...
Indeed. Learning happens, one way or another. Even while ceasing to exist.
Epochs come and go.
I could say one thing more: My heart bleeds for us all, who cannot see where this will all lead, just knowing it will not go well. I am reminded of that movie "Total Recall": all those mutants with those horrific deformities.
I keep thinking of the book _The Chrysalids_ and all of their deformities. Over half of all babies born were deformed.
It's appropriate today for all to consider which sources (if any) of our radioecological educations have well and truly informed us.
Why is TEPCO still "in charge?" Why hasn't the Japanese government at least nationalized them?
This is a WORLD problem, and tepco should be dissolved. They, as with all other Corporations, only care about the bottom line of profits. We can easily see what happens when Corporations "self-regulate" themselves.
TEPCO has a liability cap, so they don't give a damn. They, like any other Corporation, can just go bankrupt, can just throw in their hand, and avoid the consequences. A Corporation is just a piece of paper, and should have NO RIGHTS.
While we're at it, let's nationalize big oil, to prevent another BP.
"Why is TEPCO still "in charge?" Why hasn't the Japanese government at least nationalized them?"
Well, in all fairness, why was BP in charge of "cleaning up" its mess in the Gulf of Mexico?
Same answer in both cases.
“Breach of Containment" in Japan?
(The Three Most Feared Words in the Lexicon of a Nuclear Scientist)
by Michio Kaku on March 26, 2011
QUOTE:
"I have suggested on TV that the leadership of the crisis management be replaced. The utility should be kept on as a consultant, but a top flight international team of nuclear scientists and engineers should take over, aided by access to the Japanese military. The utility is simply overwhelmed by the crisis. Only the mililtary, guided by an international team of top scientists and engineers, can tame this monster."
Full article:
http://bigthink.com/ideas/31746
We are all victims, to some degree.Shut down nuclear power plants now! Transfer the money used to build these plants along with the astronomical sums of money used for the pipelines and transmission systems for natural gas and the Canadian oil sands to solar and wind development and other renewable sources of energy.
Environmentalists in Canada, including First Nation folks, are not happy with the devastation occurring around places like Ft. MacMurray either: Reminiscent of what's happening to the mountains of West Virginia.
Tragic for future generations to come. Tragic that history will find us all culpable. Tragic that we didn't stop this insanity in the 60's. I argued with my Dad back then about it. He, like so many other engineers, just saw the benefit, but refused to address the danger. Mixed with climate change, we're in for a very bumpy ride.
True, true. I get a sick feeling when I hear or read of future generations. At the rate that the destruction of the world environment by homo sapiens is advancing, future generations, of all larger organisms and not just humans, may be counted in single digits. If there is a god, why would an all powerful entity allow a life negating plague such as this human species evolve upon the earth? Does it really matter?
Humans have free will, too many have made poor choices.
The EPA & FDA will declare that glowing fish is good for you. Think of the benefits - you can see what you're cooking in the dark, and since it's irradiated, you don't have to worry about pesky bacteria that might make you sick.
I could die laughing! Thanks, PEAdvocate.
Actually USA industry has been advocating the use of waste radioactive isotopes to irridate food, I believe Florida may have implemented it.
This sounds like the promise that releasing tons of chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico to breakup oil wouldn't hurt the marine life. M$M repeated the message and then ignored reporting the effects the chemicals did and still do have on the marine life.
Mankind seems to have not figured out, that he is smarter, then he is wise.
Well, it has been said for at least since Einstein said it after the bombs were dropped.
It could just as well have been said ABOUT Einstein as well.
I am open to information if you have it. If you think he wanted bombs dropped you are wrong. Very wrong. He was a major peace activist in fact. He was duped by the u.s. government. And if this is not known to you, he was not part of the manhattan project. Kept out of the loop completely and called to the McCarthy trials as a subversive, if my reading serves me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Einstein-Roosevelt-letter.png. I highly recommend especially page 2.
The worship of Albert Einstein by ignorant progressives desperately looking for heroes is an endless source of annoyance.
That is a very disrespectful comment. And i worship no one.
I find your attitude and self righteous presumptuousness a source of annoyance.
Au Revoir
Readytitransform
Without the signing or delivery of the letter to Roosevelt, the Manhattan Project might not have happened.
Einstein admitted it was the greatest mistake of his life.
Corvo’s words might have seemed harsh, but uninformed Progressives are annoying
Ciao
The context of Einstein's place in history needs to include the very hard lesson that he acknowledged, that technology was not only a double-edged sword, but a growing locus of greed. Also, be very aware that Edward Bernais, nephew of Sigmund Freud, was the new propaganda king of the nascent advertising manipulation shaping public opinion in a tsunami arrival of the neo-liberal corporate machine - later addressed by Eisenhower.
We still suffer from envisioning technology as having the god-like power of answering all questions.
I often think that the only person of consequence who understood that science ought to be about more than discovering things and serving political-corporate masters was Friedrich Dürrenmatt.
Once again, you got it right. old goat
There certainly is a difference between being a scientist who played a role in developing nuclear energy, and a man who wanted to drop a nuclear bomb.
In the letter to Roosevelt, Einstein was warning him of the danger of the Germans' interest/research/development into possible nuclear bombs and the need to speed up American work of the same nature with necessary funding and government oversight. The reason is clear.
And it was not necessary that the US actually drop an atomic bomb on population centers in Japan to end the Pacific war.
Albert Einstein was indeed a pacifist, horrified of the genie once out of the bottle.
Einstein's letter was NOT about "developing nuclear energy." It was a request to the President that he start gathering uranium and experts in nuclear fission because the Germans might be inventing a bomb.
Einstein didn't have "nuclear energy" or backlit Etch-a-Sketches in mind. He was asking point-blank for the development of an American Bomb.
Whether he was "horrified of the genie" he helped let out of the bottle isn't of much consequence.
Thank you for reiterating my second paragraph. I like mine better.
You seem like someone who likes to argue just for arguments sake.
Surely Einstein wasn't so foolish as to believe that a nation would develop weaponry in order never to use it -- behavior entirely without precedent in human history.
If not Einstein, someone else to blame. The first in line at the research buffet is the pentagon. Crowding close behind are the utilities. It's all you can eat and we pay the bill.
This little side argument is hilarious. I envision a group of bickering men and women oblivious to the world around them yet all of them self-aggrandized saviors or proponents of justice.
The article is about the nuclear disaster, not whether Einstein or a goldfish may have felt one way or another about it if they were alive today.
...and to add to the inane, who cares whether that goldfish did want nukes or not? It's the ideology, belief and hope that someone or something out there with influence is on everyone's side. It's like believing in god, only it could be real.
(duplicate post deleted)
Yes Rick, you are very correct in this assesment. Google Robert Jensen, a professor of jouranalism at UT Texas/Austin. He discusses humanity's confusion of 'cleverness' with 'wisdom'. We are very clever, but we are not wise.
Love 2 All,
RtTBt
We need to discuss, the ignored and very deadly Iodine 129 being released into the environment.
here is a link to a dispersion model for the upcoming week. showing the I-131 cloud.
not good news for Japan or Korea this week, if the weather patterns develop as forecast.
[splitURL]
http://www.woweather.com/weather/news/fukushima?LANG=us&VAR=nilujapan131&HH=33&LOOP=1
it takes a long time to load but very informative.
Instead of trying to trace the leak with white bath salts Japan should be shoving pro nuclear advocats in the no.2 pit. First in should be our pro nuclear "Grifter in Chief " and that fucking George Monbiot. These two have enough bullshit in them to plug anything up.
But that would only substitute one form of water pollution with another.
Monbiot's fear of CO2 and global warming blinds him to the danger of everything else. He is completely irrational.
Please explain the basis for your apparent position that nuclear power is more dangerous than our burning of hydrocarbons.
http://www.monbiot.com/
fukushima bears more than a passing resemblance to the gulf oil spill. the people of japan, just as the people of the gulf coast, have our deepest sympathies for the catastrophe visited upon them.
however, if there were glaring and obvious omissions/ errors in oversight of the reactors maintainence or design, those responsible should face justice. besides the japanese themselves, this will include those directly harmed by the radiation, such as marine fisheries of other pacific nations.
one wonders how the US would react if a reactor meltdown on the canadian border rendered a US state uninhabitable.
In the months ahead, our "border" will become a lot closer to Japan's.
San Diego, CA
There goes the food chain, prepare to mutate
Get used to grieving. There's a considerable amount of it ahead for everyone everywhere. The survivors will consider themselves the unlucky ones.