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Japan to release Fukushima water into ocean

reuters.com

20 points by jacktang 2 years ago · 30 comments

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morelisp 2 years ago

The actual data:

> That water will contain about 190 becquerels of tritium per litre, below the World Health Organisation drinking water limit of 10,000 becquerels per litre, according to Tepco.

Google tells me regular seawater is 14 Bq/l.

Anyone with physics knowledge want to do the journalist's actual job and chime in? 10x worse than average sounds bad but 50x better than safe sounds good. What's the actual effect here? Is the tritium itself the problem (vs. I'm assuming, usually potassium)?

  • x86x87 2 years ago

    It's a mixed bag.

    https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1029/ML102990104.pdf

    Who is 10000, but this varies with EU having a 100 bq/l limit, US a 740 limit, Canada 7000/l

    So going by WHO recommendation it's fine, but 2x what the limit in Europe is.

    Looks like normal levels are 5-15 /l depending where it's measured.

    So: this is probably 10x what you'd encounter naturally but allegedly way under the limit depending on who is making the recommendations (with EU somewhat of an outlier)

    • djmips 2 years ago

      But the ocean is vast. So wouldn't this mix in and ultimately be an imperceptible change in the average?

      • x86x87 2 years ago

        In theory yes. In the real world I would not be surprised to hear that there are higher concentrations in specific areas due to currents and whatnot (ie it would take a while to evenly spread out)

      • galleywest200 2 years ago

        Maybe globally and eventually, but at first the nearby nations could possibly have elevated levels in their surrounding waters for the time being.

        • mentalpiracy 2 years ago

          I wanted to math this out.

          East china sea: ~770,000 square km surface area; 350m average depth = 269,500,000,000 cubic meters of water

          First discharge = 7,800 cubic meters over 17 days == approx. 459m^3 released / day == 1.70315399 x 10^-9

          They might find five or six extra tritium atoms per liter of water.

          Does this one off make it okay to dump into the ocean generally? No obviously not, the ocean is not just a magic dumpster to make bad things disappear. But in this case, tritium already exists naturally in sea water, and the introduced concentration has already been minimized.

          If your personal heuristics for avoiding risk push you towards avoiding Japanese seafood over this, that's fine, but you should actually be avoiding all seafood.

        • morelisp 2 years ago

          My intuition could be way off, but I think there's more than 10x more water (even at some ridiculously thin surface depth) between Korea and Japan than there is in the Fukushima tanks.

          Wikipedia says 210 km³ flows into the Sea of Japan yearly. The article says the total stored water is "one million metric tons", which is... probably within the measurement error of the total SoJ flow.

Pigalowda 2 years ago

“190 becquerels per liter”

Oh gee oh wow!

1 millicurie (mCi) = 37 megabecquerels (MBq)

1 PET/CT scan is between 4-20 mCi.

So I guess if you drink, snort, bathe and just enematize yourselves with 48,684 liters of this poisonous horrible water it will be the same as getting a single PET CT.

The amount of whining, specifically Chinese whining, is absurd. Especially as their shitty air pollution blankets the entire Pacific.

These people have to breathe canned air Space Balls style but they have time to cry and complain about 190 becquerels that are going to be diluted to homeopathic concentration rapidly.

Why don’t they find time to worry about radon gas? We all are probably breathing in enough of that shit to actually give us lung cancer but it doesn’t bother most.

teg4n_ 2 years ago

Sounds like an origin story for Godzilla

andrewstuart 2 years ago

Why does it have to be released?

  • guax 2 years ago

    Concentrated = Slightly Dangerous And Hard to Manage

    Diluted = Very Safe

    It doesn't HAVE to be released per se but it's a non story. The issue is the optics and not the technicals.

  • extraduder_ire 2 years ago

    It has to go somewhere, and this isn't the first time they've done this.

badcarbine 2 years ago

Goodbye seafood. Hello fish farming?

WhereIsTheTruth 2 years ago

Looks like I'll have to ban Japanese products (Tea/Fish) and potentially anything from the pacific..

Japanese government is irresponsible

  • Moomoomoo309 2 years ago

    I'd recommend reading some of the other comments on here wrt how radioactive the water actually is. It seems to be well within safe levels for all but the most stringent agencies as-is, and they're going to put it in the ocean, where it will dilute to unnoticeable levels. This is a nothingburger story, plain and simple.

  • kylecazar 2 years ago

    Did you read how high the WHO limit is for drinking water? Just using that as a baseline, this doesn't seem all that irresponsible.

    • WhereIsTheTruth 2 years ago

      You'd be surprised what the WHO allows McDonald's to put in their food and in the whole supply chain

      Do you own research of the risks, I listen to scientists, not politicians

      • dragonwriter 2 years ago

        > You’d be surprised what the WHO allows McDonald’s to put in their food and in the whole supply chain

        Literally anything, but only because while there are many gorganizations in the world that regulate food, food service, and agricultural suppy chains, WHO isn’t one of them, being an intergovernmental coordination and information sharing entity, not a regulatory agency.

  • anArbitraryOne 2 years ago

    You should probably ban bananas as well, not to mention smoke alarms. And brazil nuts? Forget it. Do you consume potatoes, carrots, or avocados? Those are all radioactive as well

  • jrflowers 2 years ago

    Best to ban products from the Atlantic as well. It touches the Pacific.

  • mentalpiracy 2 years ago

    how would Japanese tea be affected by sea water?

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