Yahoo – AFP, 26 October 2012
Higher-than-normal
radiation levels found in fish caught off Japan's east coast more than a year
after the Fukushima nuclear disaster could indicate the plant is still leaking,
new research says.
Marine
chemist Ken Buesseler of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution reviewed
official Japanese data on caesium levels in fish, shellfish and seaweed
collected near the crippled nuclear plant.
Buesseler
concluded the lingering contamination may be due to low-level leaks from the
facility or contaminated sediment on the ocean floor, according to his
research, published Thursday in the US journal Science.
He said
that while the vast majority of the catch off Japan's northeast coast is well
within safety limits, some fish caught near Fukushima are considered unfit for
consumption under Japanese regulations.
"To
predict how the patterns of contamination will change over time will take more
than just studies of fish," said Buesseler, who led an international
research cruise in 2011 to study the spread of radionuclides from Fukushima.
"What
we really need is a better understanding of the sources and sinks of caesium
and other radionuclides that continue to drive what we're seeing in the ocean
off Fukushima."
A huge
tsunami, sparked by a massive 9.0-magnitude undersea earthquake, swamped the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in March 2011.
Reactors
went into meltdown, spewing radiation over a large swathe of Japan's
agriculture-heavy northeast, in the planet's worst atomic disaster for a
generation. Around 19,000 people were killed or remain missing.
Scientists
estimate that the vast bulk of that radiation found its way into the ocean,
either by direct releases of contaminated cooling water in the early weeks of
the disaster, or through the water cycle.
The study
called it the "largest accidental release of radiation to the ocean in
history".
Contamination
levels vary across fish species and are not declining, the study showed, though
Buesseler found that demersal, or bottom-dwelling fish, consistently showed the
highest caesium counts from the damaged nuclear plant.
Demersal
include cod, conger, flounder, halibut, pollock, rockfish, skate and sole.
The
scientist stressed that the levels of radiation found in most fish caught off
Japan's northeastern coast mean they remain safe for consumption, even after
the government tightened the rules in April this year.
An abstract
from Buesseler's paper on the website of the journal says: "Although
offshore waters are safe with respect to international standards for
radionuclides in the ocean, the nuclear power plants continue to leak
radioactive contaminants into the ocean."
Fears about
food safety, which was once a given in Japan, have only slightly abated in the
wake of the Fukushima disaster, with many consumers still eschewing products
from the affected area despite government reassurances.
Japan's
powerful farming and fishing industries have suffered both at home and abroad,
with exports of farm products taking a major hit in 2011, falling 7.4 percent
compared to the previous year.
Buesseler
and Mitsuo Uematsu of the University of Tokyo are organising a scientific
symposium in Tokyo on November 12 and 13 to present the latest findings on how
the nuclear disaster has affected the ocean and marine life.

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