Japan’s Fukushima waste poses ‘major nuclear contamination disaster’, Pacific islands fear
- Japan’s plans to release more than 1 million tonnes of water from destroyed nuclear power plant threatens fishing grounds, Pacific Island Forum says
- ‘Our region is steadfast that there be no discharge until all parties verify it is safe,’ the forum’s secretary general said on Wednesday
Japan approved the future release of more than 1 million tonnes of water from the site into the ocean after treatment in April 2021.
The PIF, a regional bloc of 17 island nations, argues the release of the water could have a major impact on fishing grounds that island economies rely on, and where up to half of the world’s tuna is sourced.
“Our region is steadfast that there be no discharge until all parties verify it is safe,” PIF Secretary General Henry Puna said on Wednesday at a live-streamed public meeting in Suva, Fiji.
“We must prevent action that will lead or mislead us towards another major nuclear contamination disaster at the hands of others,” he added, saying Pacific islanders continued to endure the long-term impacts of the nuclear testing legacy on a daily basis.
France conducted atomic testing between 1966 and 1996 at Mururoa Atoll in French Pacific territories.
Japan regulator OKs release of treated Fukushima water
Ken Buesseler, a scientist with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, told the forum on Wednesday that a PIF scientific expert panel was urging Japan to reconsider the waste release because it was not supported by data and more information was needed.
Radioactivity moves across the ocean with currents and tides and risks contaminating fish, he said.
Japan’s foreign ministry has previously said that regulators deemed it safe to release the water, which would be filtered to remove most isotopes but would still contain traces of tritium, an isotope of hydrogen hard to separate from water.