Published on Tuesday,
September 10, 2019
"Another reason to not
build nuclear power plants."
The far-reaching dangers of
nuclear power were on full display Tuesday as Japan's environmental minister
recommended releasing more than one million tons of radioactive wastewater from
the Fukushima Daiichi plant into the Pacific Ocean nearly a decade after a
tsunami caused a meltdown at the coastal facility.
"There are no other
options" other than dumping the water into the ocean and diluting it,
Yoshiaki Harada said at
a news conference in Tokyo.
Chief cabinet secretary
Yoshihide Suga disputed Harada's claim, saying the government has not settled
on a method of disposing of the wastewater. Other options include vaporizing
the water and storing it on land.
But critics on social media
said the suggestion of pouring contaminated water into the Pacific is more than
enough evidence that the risks associated with nuclear power are too great to
continue running plants like Fukushima.
The wastewater has been stored
in tanks at Fukushima since the 2011 tsunami, when a meltdown at the plant
forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of people.
For
years since the disaster, the plant has pumped tens of thousands of
tons of water to help cool its damaged reactor cores and keep them from
melting. After the water is used and contaminated with radionuclides and radioactive
isotopes, it is stored in the tanks, but the plant expects to run out of room
in 2022.
The Atomic Energy Society of
Japan said recently
that it could take 17 years for water to meet safety standards after it is
diluted.
Greenpeace, which has long
called on the Japanese government to invest in technology to remove
radioactivity from the water, said the environmental minister's proposal is
unacceptable.
"The government must
commit to the only environmentally acceptable option for managing this water
crisis which is long-term storage and processing to remove radioactivity,
including tritium," Shaun Burnie, a senior nuclear specialist the group's
German office, told France
24.
The government of neighboring
South Korea expressed grave concerns over the potential plan to dump the water
into the Pacific, saying it planned to work closely with Japan to come up with
an alternative.
"The South Korean
government is well aware of the impact of the treatment of the contaminated
water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant on the health and safety of the
people of both countries, and to the entire nation," the government said.
No comments:
Post a Comment