Nothing said by the nuclear industry can, or should be, taken at face value. Be it safety, correcting defects, righting mistakes or construction integrity, reassurances that turn out to be hollow time and again are chilling.
The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP) disaster in 2011 forever stained the Japanese nuclear industry. The site has been marked by more than 1000 tanks filled with contaminated water that arises from reactor cooling. Attempts by the Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (TEPCO) to decommission and clean the plant have led to a wastewater accumulating at the site, the result of groundwater leakage into the buildings and the cooling process.
According to Japan鈥檚 Nuclear Regulatory Authority, the gradual disposal of 1.3 million radioactive tonnes of waste water into the Pacific over three decades can be undertaken without serious environmental consequences.
The view in 2021 was that the Advanced Liquid Processing System (ALPS) used to clean the contaminated water would be effective. But a primary concern is the presence of a radioactive form of hydrogen, tritium, which is a challenge to remove.
There are various questions that arise, not least that the levels of radioactivity from tritium will be significantly reduced by 1/40th of regulatory standards through the use of seawater.
As by scientists Ken Buesseler, Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress and Antony M. Hooker there are also non-tritium radionuclides that are 鈥済enerally of greater health concern as evidenced by their much higher dose coefficient 鈥 a measure of the dose, or potential human health impacts associated with a given radioactive element, relative to its measured concentration, or radioactivity level鈥.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) effectively condones the plan saying on July 4 that Japan鈥檚 decision is .
IAEA General Rafael Mariano Grossi said: 鈥淭he IAEA notes the controlled, gradual discharges of the treated water into the sea, as currently planned and assessed by TEPCO, would have a negligible radiological impact on people and the environment.鈥
But a number of countries are concerned at the planned move, including concern that the IAEA may have been lent upon to reach its conclusions on the Japanese release program. Tokyo is, after all, a generous donor to the organisation.
For his part, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno that 鈥淛apanese funding and staffing at the IAEA [could be used] to question the neutrality of the IAEA final report鈥.
Not only did such criticism 鈥渃ompletely miss the target but also shakes the significance of the existence of international organisations.鈥
Japan鈥檚 fisherfolk and farmers, China, South Korea and the Pacific Island nations are concerned about the fate of the Blue Pacific and have been vocal opponents.
China鈥檚 Foreign Ministry that the IAEA report had been released in 鈥渉aste鈥, failing 鈥渢o fully reflect the views from experts that participated in the review鈥.
Some in the nuclear-environmental industry are wondering what the fuss is all about, although their rebuttals do not inspire optimism.
The University of Portsmouth鈥檚 Jim Smith 聽all the concerns are 鈥渏ust propaganda鈥 and that 鈥減oliticians don鈥檛 have any evidence in saying this鈥. He said other tritiated water had been released at other sites, including a nuclear site in China and the Cap de La Hague nuclear fuel reprocessing site which already 鈥渞eleases 450 times more tritiated water into the English Channel Fukushima has planned for release into the Pacific鈥.
What examples to emulate.
Nigel Marks, Brendan Kennedy and Tony Irwin also , based on their 鈥渃ollective professional experience in nuclear science and nuclear power鈥 that the release will be safe.
Their primary focus is however solely on the treatment of tritium, based on an almost heroic assumption that 62 other relevant radionuclides have been removed by the ALPS approach.
They dismiss 鈥渙ld phobias鈥 of radiation. 鈥淎lmost everything is radioactive to some degree, including air, water, plants, basements and granite benchtops. Even a long-haul airline flight supplies a few chest X-rays worth of radiation to everyone on board.鈥
Continuing their , the trio said the Pacific Ocean already has 8.4 kilograms (3000 petabecquerels or PBq) of the substance, compared to 3 grams (1PBq) of the total tritium present in the Fukushima wastewater.
Such views serve to soften and conceal the broader problems of institutional malfeasance and past secrecy, citing the argument of 鈥渟ound science鈥 to conceal error and incompetence.
The discharge plans in technical, jargon-laden terms, notably to the Pacific Islands Forum.
Adding to the clandestine air that has surrounded TEPCO, scepticism should not only be mandatory, but instinctive.
Why not ask such voices as Hooker and Buesseler to consider other disposal methodologies, such as solidifying the ALPS-treated wastewater within concrete?
Japanese authorities this, citing insuperable technical and legal problems.
That remains the troubling question. As Dalnoki-Veress , Japan鈥檚 claim to have investigated and rejected that encasement option in any comprehensive, systematic way should be dismissed. 鈥淥ne way it is different is that it suggested using diluted water rather than ALPS treated water which will be 2 orders of magnitude less in volume.鈥
How cheeky of them.
[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]