Sonoma Independent

Is Fukushima Radiation A Danger to the California Coast?

From the very beginning of the Fukushima Daiichi disaster, the public in Japan and around the world have not been told the full story of what has been happening at the nuclear power plant.  An internet search turns up many pages about radiation from Fukushima, but there is very little credible scientific information regarding how much radiation is really leaking into the Pacific Ocean and where the currents are taking it. Some internet sites make hysterical claims that the West Coast is now being fried by nuclear radiation from Fukushima while other government and nuclear related organizations such as the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Administration claim that Fukushima “falls well short of posing any U.S. health or environmental risk.”

Not only is there little reliable data being released to the public — but what little information that does appear, both in Japan and in the U.S., uses scientific jargon such as bequerels, millisieverts, and millirems, terms which are confusing to most non-nuclear scientists and deceptively equate radiation exposure from long distance flights or cosmic rays to situations such as ingestion of Cesium 137.

How might the Fukushima disaster impact Sonoma County and Northern California?

John Bertucci, who recently helped found the Petaluma-based Fukushima Response, explains that, Instead of a concerted international effort to contain the Fukushima disaster, we’re getting a public relations campaign minimizing the danger to the environment and human health which will continue for generations to come.”  Fukushima Response is an alliance of local organizations and International Medcom, a Sebastopol based company that manufactures and distributes radiation measuring equipment The group plans to monitor radiation levels in local air, food and water, and provide the public with accurate information about how Sonoma County is being affected by the Fukushima disaster.

A number of issues concern local activists. These include the following:

The Fukushima nuclear disaster started March 11, 2011 when a 9.0 earthquake and a 15-meter tsunami disabled the power supply and cooling system of three Fukushima Daiichi reactors. Three nuclear cores melted down completely in the first three days after the accident.  Since then, there has been a concerted effort by the nuclear industry and government to suppress information about this disaster. The official line from the Japanese government is that the situation is under control. “The government is moving to the forefront and we will completely resolve the matter,” said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, before Tokyo was awarded the 2020 Summer Olympics. The utility that runs the plant, TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company), has been notoriously close-mouthed about its operation. To this day, aided by a recently passed government secrets act in Japan, journalists in Japan who violate the “state secrets” law by reporting the effects of Fukushima can be thrown into prison for 10 years. According to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, “No U.S. government or international agency is monitoring the spread of low levels of radiation from Fukushima along the west coast of North America and around the Hawaiian Islands.”

What is Known

What Is Not Known

Paul-André Schabracq, AICP, MCIP is an urban and environmental planning consultant who has worked for cities and counties in Northern California and throughout Canada.  His previous journalistic experience includes freelance radio and television documentary production for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).  He has friends living in Kobe and Shinjuku, Japan.

 

 

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