(Source)
http://www.independent.co.uk/incoming/return-to-the-radiation-zone-fukushima-cleanup-operation-mired-in-fear-and-misinformation-8810158.html
Two
years after Japan’s nuclear power plant disaster nobody knows for
certain how dangerous the contamination is.
Across
much of Fukushima’s rolling green countryside they descend on homes
like antibodies around a virus; men wielding low-tech tools against a
very modern enemy, radiation. Power hoses, shovels and mechanical
diggers are used to scour toxins that rained down from the sky 30
months ago. The job is exhausting, expensive, and – some say –
doomed to failure.
Today,
a sweating four-man crew wearing surgical masks and boiler suits
cleans the home of 71-year-old Hiroshi Saito and his wife Terue, 68.
The aim is to bring average radiation at this home down to 1.5
microsieverts an hour, still several times what it was before the
accident but safe enough, perhaps, for Mr Saito’s seven
grandchildren to visit. “My youngest grandchild has never been
here,” he says. Since 2011, the family reunites in Soma, about 20km
(12 miles) away.
For
a few days during March 2011, after a string of explosions at the
Daiichi nuclear plant roughly 25 kilometres to the south, rain and
snow laced with radiation fell across this area, contaminating
thousands of acres of rich farmland and forests.
More
than 160,000 people nearest the plant were ordered to evacuate. The
Saito’s home fell a few miles outside the 20km compulsory
evacuation zone, but like thousands of others, they left voluntarily.
When they returned two weeks later their neat, two-storey country
house appeared undamaged but it was covered in an invisible poison
only detectable with beeping Geiger counters.
Nobody
knows for certain how dangerous the radiation is. Japan’s central
government refined its policy in December 2011, defining evacuation
zones as “areas where cumulative dose levels might reach 20
millisieverts per year [20 mSv/yr],” the typical worldwide limit
for nuclear power plant engineers and other radiation workers.
The
worst radiation is supposed to be confined to the 20km exclusion
zone, but it spread unevenly: less than 5km north of the Daiichi
plant, our Geiger counter shows less than 5 millisieverts a year;
40km north west, in parts of Iitate village, it is well over 120
millisieverts. Those 160,000 refugees have not returned and are
scattered throughout Japan. The nuclear diaspora is swelled by
thousands of voluntary refugees who, unlike the Saitos, have not
returned. Local governments are spending millions of dollars to
persuade them back.
The
price tag for cleaning a heavily mountainous and wooded area roughly
the same size as County Wicklow (2,000 sq km) has government heads
spinning. In August, experts from the National Institute of Advanced
Industrial Science and Technology put the total cost of
decontamination at $50bn (£31.6bn). The Japan Centre ?for Economic
Research, a Tokyo-based think-tank says the final tally will be
$600bn.
Mr
Saito’s home falls within the boundaries of Minamisoma, a city that
has never recovered from the disaster. Most of its 71,000
population fled voluntarily 20km south. A third have yet to return,
spooked by lingering radiation and the fear of another calamity at
the still unstable facility.
“We’ve
worked hard to make our city livable again,” says Mayor Katsunobu
Sakurai. “But everything we’ve done could be for nothing unless
the problems at the plant are fixed.”
Fighting
radiation is now one of Minamisoma’s few growth industries. The
city has set up a permanent office to co-ordinate decontamination
with a budget this year alone of $230m.
Since
last September, a crew of 650 men has laboured around the local
streets and countryside, cleaning schools, homes and farms. By the
end of the year, the operation will employ nearly 1,000 people – a
large chunk of the town’s remaining able-bodied workforce.
Radiation
levels in most areas of Fukushima have dropped by around 40 per cent
since the disaster began, according to government estimates, but
those figures are widely disbelieved. Official monitoring posts
almost invariably give lower readings than hand-held Geiger counters,
the result of a deliberate strategy of misinformation, say critics.
“They
remove the ground under the posts, pour some clean sand, lay down
concrete plus a metal plate and put the monitoring post on top,”
says Nobuyoshi Ito, a farmer who opted to stay behind in the heavily
contaminated village of Iitate. “The device ends up 1.5 metres from
the ground.”
Critics
say toxins wash down from the mountains and forests after the
decontamination crews leave, bringing radiation levels back up –
though seldom to previous levels.
The
disagreement over real radiation levels is far from academic. Local
governments are desperate for evacuees to return and must decide on
what basis, in terms of exposure to radiation, evacuation orders will
be lifted. If they unilaterally declare their areas safe, evacuees
could be forced to choose between returning home and losing vital
monthly compensation from Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco), operator
of the ruined Daiichi complex.
For
the refugees, one worrying precedent has been set in the municipality
of Date, which lies outside the most contaminated areas. In December
2012, the local government lifted a “special evacuation” order
imposed on 129 households because of a hotspot, arguing that
radiation doses had fallen below 20 millisieverts per year. Three
months later the residents lost the $1,000 a month they were
receiving from Tepco for “psychological stress.”
Still,
local leaders say they believe the decontamination will work. “Field
tests have demonstrated we can bring levels down to 5 millisieverts
per year and that is our objective,” says Norio Kanno, mayor of
Iitate. He accepts that some residents might refuse to return
until exposure falls further – the limit recommended by the
International Commission on Radiological Protection is 1 mSv/yr. But
he insists nobody will be excluded from any relocation plan. “It’s
all a question of balance, of where to put our priorities. In the
end, we need to reach a consensus as a community.”
The
Fukushima clean-up, however, faces another, perhaps insurmountable,
problem: securing sites to store contaminated soil, leaves and
sludge. Many landowners baulk at hosting “interim” dumps – in
principle for three years – until the central government builds a
mid-term storage facility.
Local
governments throughout Japan have refused to accept the toxic waste,
meaning it will probably stay in Fukushima for good. The waste is
stored under blue tarpaulins across much of the prefecture, sometimes
close to schools and homes.
At
Mr Saito’s home, the decontamination crew has finished a 10-day
shift, power-hosing his roof, digging drains and removing 5cm of
topsoil from his land. The cleanup has cut radiation by about
half, but in the trees a few meters behind his house, the reading is
2.1 microsieverts.
“Unless
you do something about those trees, all your work is useless,” he
berates an official from the city. Sometime, perhaps, the crew will
have to return, he speculates. “Whatever happens, we will never
have what we had before. It’s clear that my grandchildren will
never come here again.
The
Fukushima clean-up, however, faces another, perhaps insurmountable,
problem: securing sites to store contaminated soil, leaves and
sludge. Many landowners baulk at hosting “interim” dumps – in
principle for three years – until the central government builds a
mid-term storage facility.
Local
governments throughout Japan have refused to accept the toxic waste,
meaning it will probably stay in Fukushima for good. The waste is
stored under blue tarpaulins across much of the prefecture, sometimes
close to schools and homes.
At
Mr Saito’s home, the decontamination crew has finished a 10-day
shift, power-hosing his roof, digging drains and removing 5cm of
topsoil from his land. The cleanup has cut radiation by about
half, but in the trees a few meters behind his house, the reading is
2.1 microsieverts.
“Unless
you do something about those trees, all your work is useless,” he
berates an official from the city. Sometime, perhaps, the crew will
have to return, he speculates. “Whatever
happens, we will never have what we had before. It’s clear that my
grandchildren will never come here again.
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