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Fukushima: WHOI senior scientist studies irradiated water Printer friendly page Print This
By Cynthia McCormick. Cape Cod Times. Axis of Logic
Cape Cod Times
Tuesday, Nov 26, 2013

For most of Japan and the rest of the world, the first clear sign of trouble at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant was a breaking news video aired the day after the tsunami in March 2011. Captured live by Fukushima Central Television (FCT) and broadcast four minutes later, the video showed a thick white cloud emerging over the plant—what turned out to be the explosion of the Unit 1 reactor (above). At the time, however, the only facts that were known came across in the newsreader’s urgent voiceover. It looked like smoke, she said, but it might be water vapor. It appeared to be drifting north, over the ocean. WHOI

Editor's Note
:
Axis of Logic Columnist and Resident Poet Mankh (Walter E. Harris III) has been conducting literature research on the aftermath of the Fukushima disaster, focusing on the grave threat of radioative contamination in the water spreading underground and around Japan and beyond. Related information is ubiquitous on the internet and there are many conflicting reports published by scientists and concerned observers. Some reports seem to be more credible than others and there have also been blatant coverups by the Japanese government. Mankh discovered this report of a scientist's work from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution on Cape Cod, MA which he sent to us for republication. It provides us with a measured, objective description of the problems and dangers of the contamination radiating from Fukushima even as the extremely delicate and hazardous cleanup is currently underway. Other articles published on Axis of Logic are linked below this article from Cape Cod Times.

- Les Blough, Editor
Axis of Logic


Ken Buesseler has been monitoring radiation levels in water collected near the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan. Cape Cod Times/ Merrily Cassid
WOODS HOLE — Sloshing with Japanese sea water, the 5-gallon plastic jugs crowding Ken Buesseler's laboratory at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution contain evidence of an ongoing nuclear crisis.

Collecting samples off the coast where the Fukushima nuclear power plant was damaged in a March 2011 earthquake, the WHOI senior scientist measured higher than normal radiation levels long after the original disaster.

"It was very concerning," Buesseler said during a recent interview in his lab, dubbed "Cafe Thorium," after the naturally occurring radioactive metal.

"It dropped off, but it never went back to pre-Fukushima levels," he said. Buesseler, along with a team from WHOI, made the first of his three visits to the Fukushima area in June 2011, suspected groundwater flowing through the reactor site was carrying radiation into the sea.

After denying that scenario for months, the Tokyo Electric Power Co., the Japanese utility that operates the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, admitted in August that there have been spills at the site and that irradiated groundwater is coursing through the Fukushima property on a daily basis.

Leaks from hastily constructed storage tanks holding contaminated water used by cleanup workers to cool down the reactor site also are contributing to the ongoing radioactivity.

"We've known that for two and half years. Every day they are making contaminated water," Buesseler said. "I'm a little disappointed in Japan. What (the denial has) done is made the public extremely mistrustful."

With the first plume of water carrying radionuclides from Fukushima due to hit the U.S. West Coast any day now, Buesseler's latest project is to convince the federal government to monitor radiation levels in the sea water.

"We don't have a U.S. agency responsible for radiation in the ocean," Buesseler said. "It's really bizarre."

He predicts the radiation will be so diluted after the long journey across the Pacific that it will pose no threat to American fisheries or recreational activities.

"It's very much a coastal Japan contaminant problem," Buesseler said.

But he knows that's not enough to reassure the public.

Given what's happened at Fukushima, Buesseler asked, "Wouldn't you want to have some measurement?"

He spent this past week in Washington, D.C., meeting with representatives of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Department of Energy, asking them to come up with some sort of plan to keep tabs on levels of radionuclides in the ocean.

Buesseler also talked with U.S. Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., who agreed the federal government has a role in making sure the oceans are healthy and safe.

But Markey said in an email that an increased federal role is not likely considering the budgetary brakes being applied by the Republicans in Congress.

"The sequester is a double-punch, cutting funding for the agencies charged with promoting scientific discovery and protecting our natural resources," he said.

Immediately after the earthquake, Markey, then a Congressman, wrote the U.S. Food and Drug Administration asking for information on how the agency was protecting citizens from contaminated seafood and agricultural products.

His concerns were further heightened last year after bluefin tuna caught near San Diego were found to be tainted with elevated levels of radioactive cesium-134 from swimming in waters off the coast of Japan.

Despite carrying "fingerprints" of Fukushima isotopes, the tuna is still safe to eat, with traces of radiation 100 times lower than what is acceptable for consumption levels in the U.S., Buesseler said.

But he knows people are concerned. In his office on the fourth floor of the Clark building on Woods Hole Road, he fields regular phone calls from surfers and salmon fishermen as well as congressmen.

'IT WAS SPOOKY'
In the absence of a government monitoring program, Buesseler and other people at WHOI have come up with their own radiation measurement program.

WHOI plans to set up a website, probably by mid-December, that will allow people to mail samples of water collected off their beaches and docks to the Cape-based scientific institution, which will test them — for a tax-free donation to WHOI, Buesseler said.

Scott Burnell, spokesman for the NRC, called it crowd sourcing and said Buesseler discussed the plans during a "friendly back and forth" meeting Friday.

"He's one of a few people who does this research," Burnell said. "It's not replicated in a lot of places."

Scientific interest in measuring radiation in ocean waters dropped after the atmospheric nuclear test ban treaty in 1963, Buesseler said.

His own expertise in the field was honed after the Chernobyl meltdown in 1986, when he studied the impact of the nuclear fallout on the Black Sea.

After the earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima reactors less than three years ago, Buesseler got private funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to pull together an international team of 17 scientists that chartered a boat from Hawaii to Japan to inspect the damage.

"It's almost like getting to a crime scene," Buesseler said. "You wanted to get there as fast as you could."

Photographs show the team members on the boat, the boxy white buildings of the stricken nuclear reactor clearly visible in the background.

"It was spooky," Buesseler said.

NOT OVER YET
Although devastated by the tsunami, the Japanese were spared nuclear fallout in heavily populated areas because prevailing weather patterns pushed it out to sea, Buesseler said.

The impact area is so concentrated that a fishing ban around the Fukushima area does not extend to all of Japan, Buesseler said. He said the water off coastal Japan, though containing higher than normal levels of radiation, is safe for surfing and boating.

And sampling — Buesseler doesn't wear gloves while holding tubes of water captured off Fukushima in his lab, even water brown from radioisotopes clinging to iron precipitates. The isotopes detect the presence of strontium-90. To test for cesium, the WHOI scientists use a special chemical agent ordered from the Czech Republic that causes the isotopes to cling to gray resin at the bottom of test tubes.

"It's still safe to handle," Buesseler said. "Safe to put in the mail."

It's different at the Fukushima plant, of course, where workers are in grave danger from coming in contact with even a puddle of water, Buesseler said.

Groundwater is flowing down from the mountains into damaged reactor buildings like leaks in a basement, picking up radioactivity along the way, he said.

The Japanese propose to build an ice wall to divert the flow of groundwater away from Fukushima.

But Buesseler said they should first find a way to fix leaks in the ever-growing "tank farm" that stores water contaminated after being used to cool down the nuclear site. He said water will be used to cool the spot for decades.

And it also behooves the Japanese to figure out a way to remove strontium-90 from the water before it goes into the tanks, he said.

Strontium-90 is stored in bones, unlike cesium that is more rapidly flushed from the tissues of marine life, Buesseler said.

"It's a huge engineering problem," he said.

This month the Japanese started the risky process of moving more than 1,000 spent fuel rods from the damaged Unit 4 building.

If one of the rods breaks or is dropped, it could cause a nuclear event that would force evacuation of the property, which could result in further disaster if cooling procedures are halted, experts say.

In the meantime, the Japanese are not able to locate three molten reactor cores. There is ongoing discussion of whether the cores have undergone a meltdown or a melt-through of the containment vessels, Buesseler said.

"You can't send humans in there. It takes decades to come up with a plan," he said. "It's bad. It's definitely not over yet."

Markey said Buesseler's quick action after the Fukushima catastrophe "has proved critical to understanding how the disaster is impacting both the ocean and the people of Japan."

The public has lost confidence in the way the utility TEPCO and the government of Japan have handled the disaster, Buesseler said. "That's why what we do here at Woods Hole is so important."


Cynthia McCormick cmccormick@capecodonline.com

Source: Cape Cod Times

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution is the world's leading non-profit oceanographic research organization. Our mission is to explore and understand the ocean and to educate scientists, students, decision-makers, and the public.


More reading:

Fukushima: Unsung Heroes  by Lauren McCauley (report) and
Mankh, Walter E. Harris III (poem).



Fukushima radiation 3 times higher than Chernobyl, West Coast at grave risk, by moxnews.com (Arnold Gundersen)



Losing battle for Fukushima? Radioactive material leaked out, plant abandoned by Alice Hibbert, RT Television



Japan Asks For World’s Help On Fukushima Leaks, News Bulletin, Popular Resistance



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