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CREATED:20230802T041000Z
DESCRIPTION:8/11/23 Japan PM: No  Dumping Off 1.3 Million Tons Of Radioactive Water 
 into Pacifica At Fukushima\n\nRally & Speakout At San Francisco Japanese 
 Consulate\n\nFriday August 11, 2023 1PM\nJapanese Consulate\n275 Battery 
 St. Near California St\nSan Francisco\n\nInitiated by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttps://nonukesaction.wordpress.com\n\nCesium 180 times limit 
 found in fish at Fukushima nuke plant 12 years after 
 disaster\n\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20230718/p2a/00m/0na/019000c\nJuly 
 19, 2023 (Mainichi Japan)\nJapanese version\n\nA rock fish, known as 
 excellent food fish, is seen in this photo provided by the Fukushima 
 Prefectural Fisheries and Marine Science Research Centre. (The fish in this 
 image is not the specimen with radioactive levels exceeding the legal 
 maximum.)\nFUKUSHIMA -- Radioactive cesium 180 times Japan's legal maximum 
 has been found in fish caught in the port at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi 
 nuclear plant, revealing that the March 2011 triple meltdown there 
 continues to impact the local ecosystem.\n\nThe cesium in the black 
 rockfish caught in May measured 18,000 becquerels per kilogram. The legal 
 limit under the Food Sanitation Act is 100 becquerels per kg. According to 
 plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) Holdings Inc., the fish 
 was captured inside the inner breakwater, close to the No. 1 to No. 4 
 reactors at the seaside plant, where decommissioning work 
 continues.\n\nWhen it rains, the rainwater streams into the "K drainage" -- 
 one of several drainpipes at the plant -- after running through debris and 
 over the ground, both contaminated with radioactive substances. It is then 
 discharged into the station's small port.\n\nTEPCO claims that it has 
 confirmed the cesium levels in the discharged rainwater are below the 
 government criteria of 60 becquerels per liter for cesium-134 and 90 
 becquerels for cesium-137. But compared with other drainages at the plant, 
 runoff with higher concentrations of radioactive materials has been 
 discharged within the inner breakwater. The seabed sediment in the area was 
 also found to contain cesium-137 up to 130,000 becquerels-plus per kilogram 
 and cesium-134 up to 3,400 becquerels-plus as of the end of January this 
 year.\n\n\nThe "K drainage" outlet, left, is seen at the Fukushima Daiichi 
 Nuclear Power Station on April 4, 2016. The two outlets on the right are "B 
 drainage" and "C drainage." (Pool photo)\nA TEPCO public relations official 
 suggested that the high level of cesium detected in the black rockfish is 
 partially attributable to water discharged from the "K drainage," and the 
 sediment inside the breakwater.\n\nNetting has been installed across the 
 port's entrance, one of the measures to prevent fish from getting out in 
 place since February 2013. In 2016, nets were also set up within the inner 
 breakwater. For this reason, TEPCO did not conduct periodical checks of 
 radioactive substance concentrations in fish inhabiting the breakwater for 
 about six years.\n\nBut after a heavily contaminated fish was found off 
 Fukushima Prefecture, apparently after it got away from the plant's port, 
 TEPCO resumed its surveys within the inner breakwater in May 2022. Between 
 then and May 2023, fish caught within and near the inner breakwater 
 accounted for approximately 90% of the 44 with radioactive levels topping 
 the 100 becquerels per kg limit.\n\nOf the 44 fish, three caught within 
 this area were found to be tainted with radioactive materials exceeding 
 1,000 becquerels per kilogram. Apart from black rockfish, 1,700 becquerels 
 per kilogram was detected in an eel in June 2022, followed by 1,200 
 becquerels in rock trout in April 2023.\n\nA TEPCO PR representative told 
 the Mainichi Shimbun recently that the company had installed more and 
 different kinds of netting starting in 2022, and that it will place nets 
 made of high-strength, corrosion-resistant chemical fiber around the inner 
 breakwater's exit.\n\nTainted fish also caught offshore\n\nA total of three 
 black rockfish that apparently escaped the port have been caught more than 
 10 kilometers from the Fukushima plant since commercial shipment 
 restrictions on the species were lifted in January 2017.\n\n\nThe Fukushima 
 Daiichi Nuclear Power Station is seen from a Mainichi Shimbun helicopter in 
 this Aug. 21, 2022 photo. (Mainichi) \nAccording to the Fukushima 
 Prefectural Federation of Fisheries Co-operative Associations, one of the 
 three fish was caught off the prefectural town of Shinchi in February 2021, 
 another off the city of Minamisoma in April that year, and the other off 
 the city of Soma in January 2022. The three specimens contained radioactive 
 materials at 500, 270 and 1,400 becquerels per kg, 
 respectively.\n\nMeanwhile, monitoring tests conducted off Fukushima 
 Prefecture by the prefectural government since April 2011 show a decline in 
 the number of fishes with high concentrations of radioactive substances. 
 Since 2016, the black rockfish caught offshore in April 2021 has been the 
 only specimen to exceed 100 becquerels per kg, and no other fish caught 
 have topped 50 becquerels.\n\nThe Fukushima fisheries federation has set 
 its own criteria of up to 50 becquerels per kg, stricter than the national 
 standard, and has tested one specimen per fish species caught off the 
 prefecture. If the specimen has more than 25 becquerels, the federation 
 sends it to the Fukushima Prefectural Fisheries and Marine Science Research 
 Centre for further testing. If the sample has no more than 50 becquerels, 
 then the species gets the green light to be shipped out.\n\nThanks to these 
 efforts, restrictions on commercial shipments of all fish species were 
 lifted in February 2020 for fishing operations off Fukushima Prefecture. 
 Trial catches limited to certain species and areas confirmed safe were 
 wrapped up in March the following year.\n\nRegardless, black rockfish 
 shipments were restricted whenever specimens above the radioactive 
 substance concentration limit were caught after they had apparently got 
 away from the nuclear plant port. Even though prefectural testing has 
 revealed no contamination above detectable levels in any black rockfish 
 specimen for over a year, shipment restrictions continue.\n\n"We urge that 
 TEPCO take thorough measures to prevent radioactive materials from getting 
 into the ocean, even within the port," a fisheries federation official 
 urged, refering to the black rockfish with more than 100 becquerels per kg 
 caught in May at the nuclear complex's port.\n\nToshihiro Wada, an 
 associate professor of fish ecology at Fukushima University, said of the 
 heavily contaminated fish, "It's likely that cesium was concentrated within 
 the fish from the food chain, confined as it is by the inner breakwater 
 where radioactive substances have accumulated from the drainages flowing 
 into the port."\n\nHe continued, "Unless fundamental measures are taken to 
 lower the concentrations of radioactive materials discharged from the 'K 
 drainage,' fish surpassing the maximum will likely keep being found," even 
 as TEPCO has stepped up measures to prevent fish from getting 
 away.\n\n\nThe Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station is seen from a 
 Mainichi Shimbun helicopter in this Feb. 9, 2022 photo. (Mainichi) \nTEPCO 
 explained that it has taken measures such as "facing" -- or paving the 
 ground's surface to reduce radioactive doses -- and removing debris at the 
 Fukushima plant to prevent radioactive materials from seeping into the 
 water due to rain. The company says it aims to get cesium concentrations 
 within the inner breakwater below 1 becquerel per liter.\n\nRadioactively 
 contaminated water has been swelling daily at the plant as water injected 
 to cool nuclear fuel debris that melted down in the 2011 disaster has been 
 accumulating with groundwater and rainwater mixing into it. TEPCO processes 
 the contaminated water using ALPS, or multi-nuclide removal equipment, and 
 stores the treated water in tanks after reducing the radioactive levels 
 apart from tritium, which is difficult to remove from water.\n\n'Set 
 treated water aside'\n\nThe Japanese government plans to release treated 
 water from the Fukushima plant into the ocean around the summer, after 
 diluting it to get tritium concentrations below 1,500 becquerels per liter, 
 or one-fortieth of the national standard. It plans to release the water 
 about 1 kilometer offshore via an undersea tunnel.\n\n"Unlike cesium, 
 tritium does not concentrate in fish even if they ingest it, according to 
 data," associate professor Wada said. "Experimental results have shown that 
 if treated water is put into regular seawater, the concentration (of 
 tritium) is reduced. We need to consider (tritium) separately from 
 cesium."\n\n(Japanese original by Riki Iwama, Fukushima Bureau, and 
 Hideyuki Kakinuma, Iwaki Local Bureau)\n\nFailed Fukushima System Should 
 Cancel Wastewater Ocean 
 Dumping\nhttps://countercurrents.org/2023/07/failed-fukushima-system-should-cancel-wastewater-ocean-dumping/\n\nin 
 World — by John LaForge —	26/07/2023 \n\nFrom the Fukushima-Daiichi 
 triple-reactor meltdown wreckage, Japan’s government and “Tepco,” the 
 owner, are rushing plans to pump 1.37 million tons (about 3 billion pounds) 
 of radioactive wastewater into the Pacific.\n\nTheir record is poor. Their 
 lies are documented. This is not safe, at all.\n\nTo keep the three 
 meltdowns’ wasted fuel from melting again, Tepco continuously pours cold 
 water over 880 tons of “corium,” the red-hot rubblized fuel amassed 
 somewhere under three devastated reactors. “That water leaks into a maze 
 of basements and trenches beneath the reactors and mixes with groundwater 
 flowing into the complex,” Reuters reported Sep. 3, 2013.\n\nMost of this 
 water is collected and put through Tepco’s jerry-rigged mechanism dubbed 
 ALPS, for Advanced Liquid Processing System, which it turns out hasn’t 
 processed much of anything.\n\nTepco, Japan’s Nuclear Regulatory 
 Authority, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and much of the 
 media endlessly repeat that ALPS removes over 62 radioactive materials from 
 the ever-expanding volume of wastewater. Reports regularly claim the 
 planned dumping is routine, safe, and manageable.\n\nThis unverified PR 
 loop has fooled a lot of people, but the ALPS is a fraud. As early as 2013, 
 the filter system stalled and the IAEA reported that April that ALPS had 
 not “accomplished the expected result of removing some radionuclides,” 
 Reuters reported.\n\nIn September 2018, the ALPS was revealed to have 
 drastically failed, forcing Tepco to issue a public apology and a promise 
 to re-filter huge volumes of the waste.\n\nAccording to Reuters, Oct. 11, 
 2018, documents on a government committee’s website show that 84 percent 
 of water held at Fukushima contains concentrations of radioactive materials 
 higher than legal limits allow to be dumped.\n\nAmong the deadly isotopes 
 still in the waste are cesium-137, strontium-90, cobalt-60, ruthenium, 
 carbon-14, tritium, iodine-129, plutonium isotopes, and more than 54 
 more.\n\nIn a June 14, 2023 op/ed for the China Daily, Shaun Burnie, the 
 Senior Nuclear Specialist at Greenpeace East Asia, reported that the ALPS 
 “has been a spectacular failure,” and noted:\n\n“About 70 percent or 
 931,600 cubic meters of the wastewater needs to be processed again (and 
 probably many more times) by the ALPS to bring the radioactive 
 concentration levels below the regulatory limit for discharge. Tepco has 
 succeeded in reducing the concentration levels of strontium, iodine, and 
 plutonium in only 0.2 percent of the total volume of the wastewater, and it 
 still requires further processing. But no secondary processing has taken 
 place in the past nearly three years. Neither Tepco nor the Japanese 
 government has said how many times the wastewater needs to be processed, 
 how long it will take to do so, or whether the efforts will ever be 
 successful. … none of these issues has been resolved.”\n\nTepco says it 
 will re-filter more than 70 percent of the wastewater through ALPS again, a 
 process that itself leaves massive amounts of highly radioactive sludge 
 that must be kept out of the environment for centuries.\n\nHoping to slow 
 the rush to dump, Professor Ryota Koyama from Fukushima University, said in 
 an interview with China Media Group last May, “If the Japanese government 
 or the Tokyo Electric Power Co. really wants to discharge contaminated 
 water into the sea, they need to explain in more detail whether the 
 nuclides have really been removed.”\n\nInternational law governing 
 state-sponsored or corporate pollution of the seven seas is relatively 
 useless in challenging Tepco’s outrageous transfer of private industrial 
 poison into the public commons. The global ban on ocean dumping of 
 radioactive waste adopted in 1993 applies only to barrels. It has allowed 
 Britain and France to pump billions of gallons of radioactive wastewater 
 into the Irish Sea and the North Sea respectively, for decades.\n\nThe Law 
 of the Sea might be able to bring Japan’s deliberate poisoning to an end 
 only after a victim or class of victims harmed by Tepco’s meltdown waste 
 brings a lawsuit that proves it. But showing that your illnesses or cancers 
 were caused by ingested or inhaled radiation is so difficult that the 
 nuclear power and weapons industry has skated along for 70 years — 
 routinely and legally venting, leaking, releasing and dumping radioactive 
 materials — without comeuppance.\n\nRadioactivity is colorless, odorless, 
 and invisible. Birth defects and cancers caused by exposure to ionizing 
 radiation are entirely too visible.\n\nJohn LaForge, is Co-director of 
 Nukewatch, a peace and environmental justice group in Wisconsin, and is 
 co-editor with Arianne Peterson of Nuclear Heartland, Revised: A Guide to 
 the 450 Land-Based Missiles of the United States.\n\n\nInitiated by No 
 Nukes Action Committee\n\nThe Japanese government led by Prime Minister 
 Kishida is moving ahead to dump more than 1.3 million tons of radioacive 
 water into the Pacific ocean at Fukushima. More than 12 years after the 
 meltdown of 3 nuclear reactors the melted rods have still not been removed 
 and\nmust be cooled with water which then becomes contaminated with 
 tritium.\nDespite protest from people from the Pacific rim and throughout 
 the world and the fisherman and people of Fukushima this government 
 doesn’t give a damn.\nIt is time to let the Japanese government that the 
 people of the United States are opposed to this massive release of this 
 contaminated water and don’t believe the propaganda of the government and 
 TEPCO that this is not a threat to all the people in the Pacific 
 rim.\nFormer Prime Minister Abe also told the Olympic committeee and the 
 people of the world that the broken reactors was under control and no 
 longer a threat to Japan and the world after the 2011 disaster.\nThe 
 government is also opening up more nuclear plants and wants to expand US 
 nuclear bases including in Okinawa  and develop nuclear weapons and 
 spending for the war machine that is threatening a war in Asia that would 
 kill millions of people throughout the region.\nJoin us and speak out to 
 stop this madness and threat to our world.\n\nIAEA rubber-stamped release 
 of radioactive Fukushima water without finishing sample 
 analysis\nhttp://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/1099039.html\nPosted 
 on : Jul.6,2023 17:14 KST Modified on : Jul.6,2023 17:14 KST	\nFacebook 
 페이스북\nTwitter 트위터\nprint 프린트\nLarger font size 
 글씨크기 크게\nSmaller font size 글씨크기 작게\nThe lack of 
 follow-through on analyzing samples deals a blow to the agency’s 
 monitoring credibility\n8716886311407182.jpeg\nIAEA Director General Rafael 
 Grossi shakes hands with those attending an event regarding the disposal of 
 irradiated water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant held in Japan’s 
 Fukushima Prefecture on July 5. (Yonhap) \nThe Hankyoreh’s examination of 
 the document shows that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) 
 published its final report on the discharge of radioactive water from the 
 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant into the ocean after only completing 
 one round of sample analysis of the contaminated water, despite previously 
 promising to carry out three rounds of safety reviews for the 
 release.\nMoreover, the IAEA released its final report even though the 
 results of its environmental sample analysis, conducted in order to 
 corroborate environmental monitoring results, had yet to come out. Critics 
 say the IAEA undermined the credibility of its own report by coming to the 
 conclusion that dumping the irradiated water into the ocean is fine even 
 before analyses of its core samples were completed.\nIn its final report 
 made public on Tuesday, regarding its plan to conduct three rounds of 
 sample analysis of the irradiated water, the IAEA revealed that “a report 
 including the analysis of these samples” — the second and third samples 
 collected in October 2022 — “is expected to be published later in 
 2023.” \nSample analysis is part and parcel of “independent sampling, 
 data corroboration, and analysis,” one of three components of a safety 
 review. In other words, the IAEA released its final report even though 
 analyses of its second and third samples of the radioactive water have yet 
 to be completed.\nPreviously, in its third interim report published in 
 December 2022, the IAEA had revealed that it would collect and analyze a 
 total of three samples of the Fukushima water in accordance with its safety 
 review process. As per this plan, an IAEA task force collected samples of 
 the radioactive water through the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), 
 once in March 2022 and twice in October 2022.\nThrough its sixth interim 
 report published in May this year, the IAEA revealed that, according to 
 analyses of the first radioactive water sample collected in March 2022 
 conducted at four different laboratories around the world including an 
 IAEA-affiliated lab and the Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety (KINS), 
 radionuclides other than tritium were not detected beyond the safety limit. 
 As this first sample was collected from the K4-B tank group, which TEPCO 
 deemed ready for discharge, after it had been homogenized for 14 days with 
 circulation and agitation equipment, observers had commented that this 
 result was as expected.\nBut results of analyses of the second and third 
 radioactive water samples collected in October have yet to come out. The 
 two samples were collected from the G4S-B10 and G4S-C8 tanks, standard 
 storage tanks for water processed by the Advanced Liquid Processing System 
 (ALPS), without undergoing circulation and agitation for sample 
 homogenization. The results of their analyses were scheduled to be 
 submitted to the IAEA earlier this year.\nThe IAEA’s final report was 
 released when analysis results of not just radioactive water samples, but 
 environmental samples have yet to come out. The IAEA had collected 
 environmental samples such as seawater, marine sediment, fish, and seaweed 
 last November, saying it would “corroborate the data from TEPCO and the 
 Government of Japan associated with the ALPS treated water discharge.” 
 \nBut IAEA’s Tuesday report only mentioned that “the results from the 
 first ILC for environmental samples [. . .] will be available later in 
 2023.” In a sense, the IAEA reached the conclusion that dumping the 
 irradiated water would have “a negligible radiological impact on people 
 and the environment” when the accuracy and credibility of data submitted 
 by Japan haven’t been fully corroborated.\nEven more, the results of 
 interlaboratory comparisons (ILC) conducted by the IAEA to determine 
 occupational radiation exposure haven’t come out yet either. 
 “Occupational radiation protection” is one of eight technical subjects 
 of IAEA safety reviews. The IAEA announced that results of occupational 
 radiation exposure ILCs would be provided later this year as well.\nExperts 
 criticized the IAEA for concluding that Japan’s plan to release 
 irradiated water into the sea is “consistent with international safety 
 standards” even before completing its analyses of core samples. Han 
 Byeong-seop, the director of the Institute for Nuclear Safety, especially 
 took issue with the fact that the contaminated water underwent only one 
 round of sample analysis. \n“Conducting three rounds of sample analysis 
 in order to reach reliable results is a universal principle in chemical 
 analysis, which is probably why the IAEA said it would carry out three 
 rounds [of sample analysis],” Han said, adding, “But by releasing a 
 report with only one round of analysis completed, [the IAEA] has proved for 
 itself that the results of its analysis are insignificant.” \nAnother 
 safety regulations expert who previously worked for KINS remarked, “I 
 suspect that the IAEA caved to Japan’s wish to have the report as soon as 
 possible by cutting short its service period and announcing results that 
 haven’t even been reached yet,” stressing that “this is a matter of 
 credibility.”\nBy Kim Jeong-su, senior staff writer\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2023/08/01/18857955.php
SUMMARY:Japan PM: No Dumping Of 1.3 Million Tons Of Radioactive Water into Pacifica At Fukushima
LOCATION:Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St/California St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2023/08/01/18857955.php
DTSTART:20230811T170000Z
DTEND:20230811T180000Z
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