Fukushima
Radiation Hitting West Coast of North America: “No One Is Measuring So
Therefore We Should Be Alarmed”
Global Research, January 27, 2014
West
Coast residents are very concerned. Indeed, many local and state government
officials have said that residents are inundating them with questions about
Fukushima radiation.
And
yet the government isn’t
measuring seawater or fish on the West Coast for radiation.
Ken
Buessler is the head scientist at Woods Hole in
Massachusetts, one of the world’s top ocean
science institutions. Much of Buessler’s career has focused on measuring
radioactive particles in the ocean, and he’s been studying groundwater and
ocean samples in and around Fukushima since the accident in March of 2011.
Buessler
has consistently tried to downplay the risks from Fukushima, and yet even he
admits that we won’t know unless we test. Buessler noted this week:
The
predictions are rather low and are not of direct concern, but no one makes measurements of these
isotopes along the [West] coast .
***
No
one is measuring so therefore we should be alarmed. I really try to take the approach
that we shouldn’t trivialize the risks of radiation and shouldn’t be overly
alarmed.
What
we don’t really know is how fast and how much is being
transported across the Pacific. Yes, models tell us it will be safe, yes the levels we
expect off the US West Coast and Canada we expect to be low, but we need
measurements — especially now, as the plume begins to
arrive along the West Coast and will
actually increase in concentration over the next 1 to 2 years. Despite public concern about the
levels, no public agency in the US is monitoring the activities
in the Pacific.
***
Without
careful, extensive, consistent monitoring, we’ll have no way of knowing how
much radiation from Fukushima is reaching our shores, and how it could affect
life in the ocean.
Buesseler
says no US government
agency currently tests radiation levels in the Pacific Ocean.“I
don’t expect the radiation levels to be high but we can’t dismiss the concerns
that the public has.”
“The
effects of Fukushima will be increasing as the front edge of a large water
plume coming from the nuclear plant will reach California soon and increase
over the years,” said Buesseler.
Buesseler
recently took his concerns to Washington where he met with US government
officials at the various agencies responsible for monitoring radiation levels
in air, food, and water.
He
said he visited
officials at the Department of Energy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Environmental
Protection Agency.
“They all said that it’s not
their responsibility to test the Pacific Ocean for radiation.
This issue is falling between the cracks of government responsibility. It’s
a health and safety issue here,”
Buesseler said.
And
Buesseler points out the circular reasoning which
the government is using (at 10:00):
I
completely agree that no
radiation has been seen in the regards that we’re not really testing for it
[laughter] in any organized way ... We have very few data; it’s not really
being organized. The
government says we don’t really need to do that because we’re predicting very
low levels.
This
type of circular reasoning is – unfortunately – common these days. For example,
when bad policy led to the 2008 financial crisis, the Gulf Oil spill,
factory-farming caused disease, runaway pesticide use, and other problems, the
government simply stopped testing or changed
allowable levels.
U.C.
Berkeley professor of nuclear engineering Eric Norman raises a similar point:
There
is no systematic testing in the US of air, food, and water for radiation,
continuous testing is needed”
***
“I’m
not terribly confident in the information Japan is sharing about the plant’s
activities and clean up. That’s why it’s
even more important now to advocate for continuous testing
of air, food, and ocean water for radiation.”
University
of Alaska Fairbanks researcher Doug Dasher notes:
There’s
a lot of unknowns, a lot of uncertainties. There are others that also have the
same message that they want to get out, we
really need to sample to understand this
and we really need to look at what’s happening out there in the ecosystem at
the same time. There’s an opportunity to do this. It’s a huge amount of initial
release, and the models
do not address the continuing release [the models all assume
that Fukushima was totally contained by about June 2011 ... in fact, it has leaked
continuously hundreds of tons of radioactive water every day for more than 2/12
years]. Fukushima has continued to leak ....
***
You
do have ships and programs going on that may be sampling marine waters for everything else but
radionuclides, so you’re not necessarily directing that
a ship has to go out solely at cost to sample for radionuclides.
***
No concrete information to
even delve into making a real judgment on any type of risk to the ecosystem.
***
The
information’s not out there.
Cal.
State Long Beach biology professor Steven Manley says:
People
should know the amount of radioactive material in the kelp.
***
I
think the amount will be small, but small doesn’t mean insignificant
***
It
is imperative that we monitor this coastal forest
for any radioactive contaminants
that will be arriving this year in the ocean currents from Fukushima.
Steven
Starr – Director of the Clinical Laboratory Science Program at the University
of Missouri – says:
I
read a very good study that was done at a big center in Australia and Spain.
They predict that every cubic meter of water off the West Coast is going to
have something like 10 to 20 atomic disintegrations per second from cesium in
it over the next several years. That doesn’t sound like a lot I guess, but what we’ve also seen is that the stuff
comes across the Pacific, some of it’s concentrated. It’s in pockets of it, the fish swim
through that and they feed in it. It’s kind of a random process.**
It’s
kind of a crap-shoot really.
Some
West Coast cities – such as Fairfax and Berkeley, California – have passed
resolutions pleading for the federal and state governments to conduct tests.
But the feds and state governments are so far silent.
Postscript:
Dr. Buessler at Woods Hole will conduct some sampling of West Coast seawater
for radiation. Dr. Buessler will use crowdsourcing and
crowdfunding to pay for his testing. Please support his efforts.
But
these are small-scale, isolated efforts.
Safecast, Netc, Radiation Network and others have
set up national geiger counter networks. And Infowars has heroically sent a
reporter up and down the West coast
using a hand-held geiger counter to test for radiation. But these all test for
radiation on the land, and do not test the seawater or fish themselves.
So
we need to demand that the government test seawater and fish, and publicly
report the results.
Many
government officials have, unfortunately, fallen for voodoo science
promoted by the nuclear industry that you get more radiation from eating
bananas or from background radiation. In the real world, however, Fukushima
radiation is not comparable to bananas, and there was no background radiation in elements spewed
by Fukushima – such as radioactive cesium or iodine – until nuclear bombs and
nuclear accidents through them into the environment a few decades ago.
Copyright © 2014 Global Research
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