Published on Sunday, February 28, 2016 by Greenpeace Blog
By Shaun Burnie
Five years ago the Rainbow Warrior sailed along the Fukushima coast conducting radiation sampling. Now it's back, and has Japan's ex-Prime Minister on board.
Scotland is over 9,000 km from Japan, but there’s something
the two countries have in common. Along the Scottish coastline, buried in
riverbeds, and mixed into the Irish Sea, you can find significant radioactive contamination coming from the other side
of the world. Yes, radioactive contamination. All the way from Japan.
Since the 1970s, Sellafield, a nuclear-reprocessing plant
in northwest England has been contracted to process high level nuclear waste
spent fuel from Japanese reactors. More than 4000 tonnes of spent nuclear fuel
was shipped from Japan to Sellafield, including waste from Tokyo Electric Power
Company (TEPCO), the owner of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
As result of reprocessing at Sellafield, more than 8 million litres of low
level nuclear waste is discharged into the ocean every day. It’s been labelled
the “most hazardous place in Europe” – with levels of
contamination in the fields, soils and estuaries at a level that can only be
described as a nuclear disaster zone.
In fact, the Irish Sea is arguably the most
radioactively contaminated sea in the world
We’re about to approach the five-year anniversary of the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear disaster, and this is a stark reminder that no matter where
you are or how far away, nuclear power has a local and global impact.
I remember waking up to the news on March 11, 2011. Though I
was at home in Scotland, I’ve never felt so connected to the people of Japan.
Having spent decades with Greenpeace actively campaigning against nuclear power
in Japan, I knew deep down that a catastrophic accident was only a matter of
time. With media requests coming in thick and fast, I recall appearing on BBC
World News live. In mid-interview, as I was talking about the specific threat
at Fukushima, I was interrupted as the news crossed to Japan where Reactor
3 exploded.
Greenpeace Japan sent a team to the Fukushima
evacuation zone to conduct independent radiation testing; and
researchers on the Rainbow
Warrior, kitted up in full body chemical suits, pulled floating seaweed
from the surrounding area to use as samples. Our results were unfortunately as
you would expect – high
levels of contamination. Subsequently, we’ve also found radiation
is still so widespread that it’s unsafe for people to return across
large parts of Fukushima.
But there’s another reason the Rainbow Warrior is here. A
Greenpeace Japan research vessel is conducting underwater marine radiation
surveys within a 20km radius of the Fukushima Daiichi plant, with the Rainbow
Warrior acting as campaign ship. As with the radioactive contamination near my
home in Scotland, Greenpeace is aiming to further the understanding of the
impacts and future threats from nuclear power and in particular the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear accident.
For Mr Naoto Kan, who was Japan’s leader when the disaster
hit, this voyage is as much personal as it is political. In the years since
2011 he has spoken out publicly against the nuclear industry,
standing alongside millions of Japanese people opposed to nuclear power – a far
cry from the current “tone-deaf” Abe administration, which is desperately
trying to save a nuclear industry in crisis. Opposed by the majority of
citizens, and beset by enormous technical, financial and legal obstacles, it’s
an effort that I believe is doomed to failure.
But there’s hope.
Like the many communities across the country that are
switching to innovative renewable power projects, Mr Kan knows that nuclear
should be buried in the past. Renewables in Japan are rising. In the 2015
fiscal year, solar power capable of generating an estimated 13 TWh was newly
installed – more than the two Sendai reactors in southern Japan that were
restarted that year can produce.
For Japan to go 100% renewable it must urgently formulate
more ambitious targets; stop all planned investments in new coal power plants
and finally abandon plans to restart its aging reactors and remove the
institutional and financial obstacles to renewable energy growth.
A nuclear free future is not only possible it is essential.
Renewable energy is the only safe and secure energy for the people of Japan and
the world.
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