Japan announced it will start releasing radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean starting Thursday. The move has been condemned by a number of Pacific nations, including China.
Also, I saw reddit libs downplaying it, coming up with excuses about low radioactivity, and why it’s not a bad thing, so they can go back to brunch. All because it’s Japan doing it, which can do no wrong. If it were China, they’d be frothing at the mouth. Fucking clowns. They couldn’t care about what long-term accumulation would do to the environment, the safety of food, and public health. At this stage, anyone who supports these sort of crimes against public health deserve the absolute worst.
I agree with the libs on this one.
"The water is being treated by what’s called an Advanced Liquid Processing System, which can reduce the amounts of more than 60 selected radionuclides to government-set releasable levels, except for tritium, which officials say is safe for humans if consumed in small amounts.
About 70% of the water held in the tanks still contains cesium, strontium, carbon-14 and other radionuclides exceeding government-set levels. It will be retreated until the concentrations meet those limits, then diluted by more than 100 times its volume of seawater before it is released. That will bring it way below international safety limits, but its radioactivity won’t be zero."
Yep 100%. This is not a big deal. The water is being effectively treated, they are doing dilution on site before release, and they are discharging into the ocean, which is a pretty fucking big place. Radioactivity is in everything (see NORMs) so the question isn’t “is this wastewater radioactive” it is “how radioactive is this water compared to typical seawater” and “how much dilution is required for any radioactivity to be below detection limit”
Safe and effective