Berliner Boersenzeitung - Japan to start releasing Fukushima water on Thursday

EUR -
AED 4.228897
AFN 72.544603
ALL 96.183662
AMD 434.229157
ANG 2.061288
AOA 1055.928483
ARS 1608.200783
AUD 1.625385
AWG 2.075586
AZN 1.956154
BAM 1.959533
BBD 2.316513
BDT 141.128872
BGN 1.968276
BHD 0.434856
BIF 3414.980192
BMD 1.151504
BND 1.471235
BOB 7.976196
BRL 6.034567
BSD 1.150196
BTN 106.089037
BWP 15.682946
BYN 3.426227
BYR 22569.474238
BZD 2.313207
CAD 1.576633
CDF 2608.156684
CHF 0.906193
CLF 0.026536
CLP 1047.776192
CNY 8.010147
CNH 7.929762
COP 4265.757296
CRC 540.24567
CUC 1.151504
CUP 30.51485
CVE 110.475953
CZK 24.447343
DJF 204.811085
DKK 7.472275
DOP 70.205887
DZD 152.237997
EGP 60.200932
ERN 17.272557
ETB 181.174658
FJD 2.547069
FKP 0.865734
GBP 0.863685
GEL 3.131737
GGP 0.865734
GHS 12.518905
GIP 0.865734
GMD 84.639353
GNF 10083.517103
GTQ 8.815834
GYD 240.758681
HKD 9.02418
HNL 30.449068
HRK 7.536477
HTG 150.750475
HUF 391.080654
IDR 19547.928299
ILS 3.595824
IMP 0.865734
INR 106.424571
IQD 1506.670433
IRR 1521194.078995
ISK 143.201496
JEP 0.865734
JMD 180.925476
JOD 0.816406
JPY 183.220375
KES 149.234346
KGS 100.698929
KHR 4611.886464
KMF 493.994725
KPW 1036.403966
KRW 1714.0307
KWD 0.353201
KYD 0.958426
KZT 555.408136
LAK 24682.022961
LBP 102995.121174
LKR 358.152334
LRD 210.470063
LSL 19.349464
LTL 3.400091
LVL 0.696533
LYD 7.372077
MAD 10.805486
MDL 20.012126
MGA 4788.142922
MKD 61.653234
MMK 2418.334396
MNT 4116.047513
MOP 9.275872
MRU 45.857361
MUR 53.68307
MVR 17.80246
MWK 1994.007542
MXN 20.353348
MYR 4.511602
MZN 73.586935
NAD 19.349464
NGN 1575.601776
NIO 42.322837
NOK 11.08236
NPR 169.747291
NZD 1.972077
OMR 0.442684
PAB 1.150191
PEN 3.970264
PGK 4.959556
PHP 68.741757
PKR 321.293307
PLN 4.26821
PYG 7465.417237
QAR 4.204128
RON 5.094269
RSD 117.401537
RUB 94.518744
RWF 1678.605284
SAR 4.321598
SBD 9.271517
SCR 16.144156
SDG 692.054169
SEK 10.733385
SGD 1.471432
SHP 0.863926
SLE 28.330837
SLL 24146.471141
SOS 656.152919
SRD 43.263728
STD 23833.803528
STN 24.547513
SVC 10.064174
SYP 127.674013
SZL 19.33492
THB 37.259785
TJS 11.041287
TMT 4.036021
TND 3.397187
TOP 2.772544
TRY 50.902244
TTD 7.79986
TWD 36.722026
TZS 3002.549389
UAH 50.705321
UGX 4342.272682
USD 1.151504
UYU 46.75888
UZS 13906.49396
VES 513.854247
VND 30264.398299
VUV 137.705052
WST 3.171483
XAF 657.211941
XAG 0.014246
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.111996
XCG 2.072849
XDR 0.817361
XOF 657.211941
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.636692
ZAR 19.256299
ZMK 10364.926801
ZMW 22.398673
ZWL 370.78375
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.99

    0%

  • BCC

    1.7200

    71.72

    +2.4%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    16.5

    +2.3%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    53.77

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    2.0300

    89.86

    +2.26%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    14.6

    +1.3%

  • RELX

    0.3300

    34.47

    +0.96%

  • BCE

    0.6521

    25.9

    +2.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.54

    -0.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • BTI

    1.0100

    60.94

    +1.66%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    90.89

    -0.01%

  • BP

    0.2300

    42.9

    +0.54%

  • AZN

    2.1100

    192.01

    +1.1%

Japan to start releasing Fukushima water on Thursday
Japan to start releasing Fukushima water on Thursday / Photo: STR - JIJI Press/AFP

Japan to start releasing Fukushima water on Thursday

Japan will begin releasing cooling water from the stricken Fukushima power plant on Thursday, 12 years after one of the world's worst nuclear disasters.

Text size:

The announcement came despite opposition from fishermen and protests by China, which has already banned food shipments from several Japanese prefectures.

Japan insists the gradual release into the sea of the more than 500 Olympic swimming pools' worth of water that has accumulated at the stricken nuclear plant is safe, a view backed by the UN atomic agency.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced the start date on Tuesday, a day after talks with fishing industry representatives who are opposed, "if weather and sea conditions do not hinder it".

The Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant was knocked out by a massive earthquake and tsunami that killed around 18,000 people in March 2011, with three of its reactors sent into meltdown.

Since then, operator TEPCO has collected 1.34 million tonnes of water used to cool what remains of the still highly radioactive reactors, mixed with groundwater and rain that has seeped in.

TEPCO says the water has been diluted and filtered to remove all radioactive substances except tritium, levels of which are far below dangerous levels.

"Tritium has been released (by nuclear power plants) for decades with no evidential detrimental environmental or health effects," Tony Hooker, a nuclear expert from the University of Adelaide, told AFP.

- 'Immense' -

This water will now be released into the ocean off Japan's northeast coast at a maximum rate of 500,000 litres (132,000 US gallons) per day.

Environmental pressure group Greenpeace has said the filtration process is flawed and that an "immense" quantity of radioactive material will be dispersed into the sea over the coming decades.

Japan "has opted for a false solution -- decades of deliberate radioactive pollution of the marine environment -- during a time when the world's oceans are already facing immense stress and pressures," Greenpeace said Tuesday.

The UN atomic watchdog said in July that the release would have a "negligible radiological impact on people and the environment".

- Salt panic -

Many South Koreans are alarmed at the prospect of the release, staging demonstrations and even stocking up on sea salt because of fears of contamination.

But President Yoon Suk Yeol's government, taking political risks at home, has sought to improve long-frosty relations with Japan and has not objected to the plan.

Yoon last week held a first-ever trilateral summit with Kishida and US President Joe Biden at Camp David, the three united by worries about China and North Korea.

China has accused Japan of treating the ocean like a "sewer", banning imports of food from 10 Japanese prefectures even before the release and imposing strict radiation checks.

Hong Kong, an important market for Japanese seafood exports, has also threatened restrictions.

This has worried people involved in Japan's fishing industry, just as business was beginning to recover more than a decade after the nuclear disaster.

"Nothing about the water release is beneficial to us," third-generation fisherman Haruo Ono, 71, whose brother was killed in 2011, told AFP in Shinchimachi, 60 kilometres (40 miles) north of the nuclear plant.

James Brady from the Teneo risk consultancy said that while China's safety concerns may be sincere, there was a distinct whiff of geopolitics and economic rivalry in its harsh reaction.

"The multifaceted nature of the Fukushima wastewater release issue makes it quite a useful one for Beijing to potentially exploit," Brady told AFP.

Beijing can "leverage a degree of economic pressure on the trade axis, exacerbate internal domestic political cleavages on the issue within Japan... and even potentially put pressure on improving diplomatic ties between Seoul and Tokyo".

Naoya Sekiya from the University of Tokyo last year conducted a survey which found that 90 percent of people China and South Korea thought Fukushima food was "very dangerous" or "somewhat dangerous".

"I think that's because Japan hasn't properly dispelled such concerns," Sekiya told AFP.

"(We) have to make a proper and sufficient explanation.”

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)