Alternatives To Dumping #Fukushima Wastewater Into The #Pacific

#Japan plans to dump treated, #radioactively contaminated water from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific. but it could be used in other ways instead.

By CodeBlue | 12 April 2023

"Claims of total safety are not supported by the available information. The world’s #oceans are shared among all, providing over 50 percent of the oxygen we breathe, and a diversity of resources of economic, #ecological and #cultural value for present and future generations.

"Within the #PacificIslands in particular, the ocean is viewed as connecting, rather than separating, widely distributed populations.

"Releasing #radioactive contaminated water into the Pacific is an irreversible action with transboundary and #transgenerational implications. As such, it should not be unilaterally undertaken by any country.

"The #PacificIslandsForum has had the foresight to ask the relevant questions on how this activity could affect the lives and livelihoods of their peoples now and into the future. It has drawn on a panel of five independent experts to provide it with the critical information it needs to perform its due diligence.

"No one is questioning the integrity of Japanese or International Atomic Energy Agency scientists [I am], but the belief that our oceans’ capacity to receive limitless quantities of #pollutants without detrimental effects is demonstrably false.

"For example, tuna and other large ocean fish contain enough mercury from land-based sources to require people, especially pregnant women and young children, to limit their consumption. #Tuna have also been found to transport #radionuclides from Fukushima across the Pacific to California.

"Phytoplankton, microscopic organisms that float free in the ocean, can capture and accumulate a variety of radioactive elements found in the Fukushima cooling water, including #tritium and carbon-14.

"#Phytoplankton is the base for all marine food webs. When they are eaten, the contaminants would not be broken down, but stay in the cells of organisms, accumulating in a variety of invertebrates, fish, marine mammals and humans. Marine sediments can also be a repository for radionuclides, and provide a means of transfer to bottom-feeding organisms."

The solution? "Using the treated cooling water onsite to mix concrete that can be used to expand the seawall should be given more consideration if the water is truly safe, as it removes the issue of ocean release and would substantially reduce the volume of stored cooling water."
#PacificOcean #FukushimaWater #TEPCOLies #OpTEPCO #Japan #NoNukes #NoDumping #Bioaccumulation

Read more: https://codeblue.galencentre.org/2023/04/12/alternatives-to-dumping-fukushima-wastewater-into-the-pacific/

@DoomsdaysCW months ago an expert interviewed by the #bbc said that using the radioactve wastewater for concrete could consume it all within 5 years, help with recovery, and keep it in a low risk state for the few decades half life. Do it!

@FullOnElectric @DoomsdaysCW Note that concrete is usable for radiation shielding due to its density. Takes more of it than it does lead to stop the same amount of radiation of the same energy, but it does work. This means that thick, heavy concrete castings made with this water will absorb most radiation from their interior, probably stop almost all alpha and beta emission, and gamma radiation will be limited to what the outermost portions of the concrete produce.

Dumping alpha emitters in seawater by comparison is a near worst case scenario. Outside the body of any living thing, alpha rays (high speed helium nuclei) cannot get in. If the source is swallowed or incorporated into the body say via a fish's gills, now the alpha rays cannot get OUT, and all their energy is dissipated inside the body. Anything eating these fish (or whatever) will then bio-concentrate many isotopes, especially heavy metals.

Exactly, @LukefromDC . Also, I'm thinking when they build concrete for a sea wall, they should incorporate #RomanConcrete ingredients into the mix, to make sure it lasts and doesn't fall prey to #ASMR! @FullOnElectric
And yeah. One of the elements they can't remove using ALPS system I believe is Plutonium, which sinks. "Oh, it will only affect bottom feeders." Ummmm... Ever hear of a food chain? @LukefromDC @FullOnElectric