Fukushima: “An Ongoing Global Radiological Catastrophe” & “A Huge Coverup” – Dr. Helen Caldicott
In Brief
- The Facts:Dr. Helen
Caldicott is considered by many to be one of the foremost experts on
Nuclear Radiation. Here she shares her thoughts on the Fukushima
disaster nearly a decade after it happened.
- Reflect On:How many incidents need to occur before the human race changes? Why are we still using nuclear energy when there are several other solutions that are more harmonious with the planet and all life on it?
Despite
humanity’s increasing levels of intelligence, if you were an
extraterrestrial looking down on our planet, you may conclude that we
are one of the dumbest species in the universe. We have so much
potential, yet we cling to our archaic ways that destroy our planet and
do not operate in harmony with this planet and all life on it.
Energy generation is one of many great
examples–we don’t have to use nuclear power, oil, or any other
Earth-disrupting method to meet our energy goals and needs. There are a
number of ways we can generate energy without harming our planet, and
they were discovered decades ago.
This reveals a very important point
about humanity and where we are at today. The issue is not finding and
discovering solutions to our problems, because the solutions already
exist. The issue is acknowledging and identifying what prevents us from
implementing these solutions. The problems are red tape, human greed,
ego, profit, money, and power. It’s a shame we have yet to dismantle
these qualities and characteristics when we are sitting on so many of
the solutions to the world’s problems.
The Fukushima disaster is a great
example. The three meltdowns and at least four big core explosions at
the Fukushima nuclear-power plant’s six American-designed Daiichi
reactors in March 2011 still constitute the world’s worst nuclear
nightmare thus far, surpassing even the Chernobyl #4 reactor’s explosion
and meltdown of April 1986.
According to Global Research:
The eight year anniversary of the triple meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility passed mostly without comment in mainstream media circles. In spite of ongoing radiological contamination that will continue to spread and threaten human health for lifetimes to come, other stories dominate the international news cycle. The climate change conundrum, serious though it may be, seemingly crowds out all other clear and present environmental hazards.As part of efforts to normalize this historic event and cover it up in its magnitude, the Japanese government has invested considerable financial, public relations and other resources into what they are billing the ‘Recovery Olympics‘ set to take place in a year’s time in Tokyo.
According to Harvey Wasserman (“14,000
Hiroshimas Still Swing in Fukushima’s Air,” The Free Press, October 9,
2013), the situation on the ground was still rather catastrophic more
than two years after the disaster, because
“Massive quantities of heavily contaminated water are pouring into the Pacific Ocean, dousing workers along the way. Hundreds of huge, flimsy tanks are leaking untold tons of highly radioactive fluids. At Unit #4, more than 1300 fuel rods, with more than 400 tons of extremely radioactive material, containing potential cesium fallout comparable to 14,000 Hiroshima bombs, are stranded 100 feet in the air.”
New readings at Fukushima have recorded the highest radiation levels seen on site.
Readings inside the containment vessel of reactor no. 2 are as high as 530 Sieverts per hour,
a dosage that would be fatal dozens and dozens of times over if a human
were to be exposed to it. The previous high was a still very fatal rate
of 73 Sieverts per hour.
The new record at Fukushima of
530 Sieverts per hour is 70% higher than that of Chernobyl. The 530
Sievert reading was recorded some distance from the melted fuel, so in
reality it could be 10 times higher than recorded, said Hideyuki Ban,
co-director of Citizens’ Nuclear Information Center. (source)
Most of this radiation is being washed out to sea and it is destroying the Pacific Ocean and much of the life in it.
Huge amounts of radiation were released into the atmosphere and it
circled around the globe especially in the northern hemisphere.
How come we haven’t heard more about Fukushima?
Is it because authorities figure,
“What’s the point? There is nothing we can do”? Although that is
probably not true, as there are multiple solutions and steps that can be
taken, like using hemp to clean up the radiation, for example.
Dr. Helen Caldicott is
an author, physician and one of the world’s leading anti-nuclear
campaigners. She helped to reinvigorate the group of Physicians for
Social Responsibility, acting as president from 1978 to 1983. Since its
founding in 2001, she served as president of the US-based Nuclear Policy
Research Institute, later called Beyond Nuclear, which initiates
symposia and educational projects aimed at informing the public about
the dangers of nuclear power, nuclear weapons, and nuclear war. And she
is the editor of the 2014 book, Crisis Without End: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe.
She is also a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and holder of 21 honorary doctorate degrees.
On the week marking the eighth anniversary of the Fukushima meltdowns, the Global Research News Hour radio program,
hosted by Michael Welch, reached out to Dr. Caldicott to get her expert
opinion on the health dangers posed by the most serious nuclear
disaster since the 1986 Chernobyl event.
The Interview
Global Research: Now
the Japanese government is preparing to welcome visitors to Japan for
the 2020 Olympic Games, and coverage of the 8th anniversary of the
Fukushima disaster is hardly, it seems to me, registered given the
significant radiological and other dangers that you cited and your
authors cited in your 2014 book, Crisis Without End. Now it’s been more
than four years since that book came out. I was hoping you could update
our listenership on what is currently being recognized as the main
health threats in 2019, perhaps not registered in the book, that you’re
currently looking at in relation to the Fukushima meltdown.
Helen Caldicott: Well
it’s difficult because the Japanese government has authorized really
only examination of thyroid cancer. Now thyroid cancer is caused by
radioactive iodine and there were many, many cases of that after
Chernobyl. And already, they’ve looked at children under the age of 18
in the Fukushima prefecture at the time of the accident, and … how many
children… 100…no 201 by June 18 last year… 201 had developed thyroid
cancer. Some cancers had metastasized. The incidence of thyroid cancer
in that population normally is 1 per million. So obviously it’s an
epidemic of thyroid cancer and it’s just starting now.
What people need to understand is the
latent period of carcinogenesis, ie the time after exposure to
radiation when cancers develop is any time from 3 years to 80 years. And so it’s a very, very long period. Thyroid cancers appear early. Leukemia appears about 5 to 10 years later. They’re
not looking for leukemia. Solid cancers of every organ, or any organ as
such appear about 15 years later and continue and in fact the Hibakusha
from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki who are still alive are still
developing cancers in higher than normal numbers.
The Japanese government has told doctors
that they are not to talk to their patients about radiation and
illnesses derived thereof, and in fact if the doctors do do that, they
might lose their funding from the government. The IAEA, the
International Atomic Energy Agency interestingly set up a hospital – a
cancer hospital – in Fukushima along with the Fukushima University for
people with cancer, which tells you everything.
So there’s a huge, huge cover up. I
have been to Japan twice and particularly to Fukushima and spoken to
people there and the parents are desperate to hear the truth even if
it’s not good truth. And they thanked me for telling them the truth. So
it’s an absolute medical catastrophe I would say, and a total cover up
to protect the nuclear industry and all its ramifications.
GR: Now, are we talking
about some of the, the contamination that happened 8 years ago or are
we talking about ongoing emissions from, for example–
HC: Well there are
ongoing emissions into the air consistently, number one. Number two, a
huge amount of water is being stored –over a million gallons in tanks at
the site. That water is being siphoned off from the reactor cores, the
damaged melted cores. Water is pumped consistently every day, every
hour, to keep the cores cool in case they have another melt. And that
water, of course, is extremely contaminated.
Now they say they’ve filtered out the
contaminants except for the tritium which is part of the water molecule,
but they haven’t. There’s strontium, cesium, and many other elements in
that water – it’s highly radioactive – and because there isn’t enough
room to build more tanks, they’re talking about emptying all that water
into the Pacific Ocean and the fishermen are very, very upset. The fish
already being caught off Fukushima, some are obviously contaminated. But
this will be a disaster.
Water comes down from the mountains
behind the reactors, flows underneath the reactors into the sea and
always has. And when the reactors were in good shape, the water was
fine, didn’t get contaminated. But now the three molten cores in contact
with that water flowing under the reactors and so the water flowing
into the Pacific is very radioactive and that’s a separate thing from
the million gallons or more in those tanks.
They put up a refrigerated wall of
frozen dirt around the reactors to prevent that water from the mountains
flowing underneath the reactors, which has cut down the amount of water
flowing per day from 500 tons to about a hundred and fifty. But of
course, if they lose electricity, that refrigeration system is going to
fail, and it’s a transient thing anyway so it’s ridiculous. In terms… So
over time the Pacific is going to become more and more radioactive.
They talk about decommissioning
and removing those molten cores. When robots go in and try and have a
look at them, their wiring just melts and disappears. They’re
extraordinarily radioactive. No human can go near them because they
would die within 48 hours from the radiation exposure. They will never,
and I quote never, decommission those reactors. They will never
be able to stop the water coming down from the mountains. And so, the
truth be known, it’s an ongoing global radiological catastrophe which no
one really is addressing in full.
GR: Do we have a better reading on, for example the thyroids, but also leukemia incubation—
HC: No they’re not looking–well, leukemia they’re not looking for leukemia…
GR: Just thyroid
HC: They’re not
charting it. So the only cancer they’re looking at is thyroid cancer and
that’s really high, and you know it’s at 201, some have already been
diagnosed and some have metastasized. And a very tight lid is being kept
on any other sort of radiation related illnesses and leukemia and the
like. All the other cancers and the like, and leukemia is so… It’s not
just a catastrophe it’s a…
GR: …a cover up
HC: Yeah. I can’t really explain how I feel medically about it. It’s just hideous.
GR: Well I have a
brother who’s a physician, who was pointing to where we should be, the
World Health Organization is a fairly authoritative body of research for
all of the indicators and epidemiological aspects of this, but you seem
to suggest the World Health Organization may not be that reliable in
light of the fact that they are partnered with the IAEA. Is that my
understanding…?
HC: Correct. They
signed a document, I think in ‘59, with the IAEA that they would not
report any medical effects of radiological disasters and they’ve stuck
to that. So they are in effect in this area part of the International
Atomic Energy Agency whose mission is to promote nuclear power. So don’t
even think about the WHO. it’s really obscene.
GR: So what would… the incentive would be simply that they got funding?
HC: I don’t know. I really don’t know but they sold themselves to the devil.
GR: That’s pretty
incredible. So there’s also the issue of biomagnification in the oceans,
where you have radioactive debris, hundreds of tons of this radioactive
water getting into the oceans and biomagnifying up through the food
chain, so these radioactive particles can get inside our bodies. Could
you speak to what you anticipate to see, what you would anticipate,
whether it’s recorded by World Health authorities or not, what we could
expect to see in the years ahead in terms of the illnesses that manifest
themselves?
HC: Well
number one, Fukushima is a very agricultural prefecture. Beautiful,
beautiful peaches, beautiful food, and lots of rice. And the radiation
spread far and wide through the Fukushima prefecture, and indeed they
have been plowing up millions and millions of tons of radioactive dirt
and storing it in plastic bags all over the prefecture. The mountains
are highly radioactive and every time it rains, down comes radiation
with the water. So the radiation – the elements. And there are over 200
radioactive elements made in a nuclear reactor. Some have lives of
seconds and some have lives of millions of years or lasts for millions
of years will I say. So there are many many isotopes, long-lasting
isotopes – cesium, strontium, tritium is another one – but many, many on
the soil in Fukushima.
And what happens is – you talked about
biomagnification – when the plants take up the water from the soil, they
take up the cesium which is a potassium analog – it resembles
potassium. Strontium 90 resembles calcium and the like. And these
elements get magnified by orders of magnitude in the rice and in the
plants. And so when you eat food that is grown in Fukushima, the chances
are it’s going to be relatively radioactive.
They’ve been diluting radioactive rice
with non-radioactive rice to make it seem a bit better. Now, into the
ocean go these isotopes as well, and the algae bio-magnify them by – you
know -ten to a hundred times or more. And then the crustaceans eat the
algae, bio-magnify it more. The little fish eat the crustaceans, the big
fish eat the little fish and the like. And tuna found in – off the
coast of California some years ago contained isotopes from Fukushima.
Also fish, being caught on the west coast of California contained some
of these isotopes. So, it’s an ongoing bio-magnification catastrophe.
And the thing is that you can’t even
taste, smell or see radioactive elements in your food. They’re
invisible. And it takes a long time for cancers to occur. And you can’t
identify a particular cancer caused by a particular substance or
isotope. You can only identify that problem by doing epidemiological
studies comparing irradiated people with non-irradiated people to see
what the cancer levels are and that data comes from Hiroshima and
Nagasaki and many, many, many other studies.
GR: Chernobyl as well, no?
HC: Oh, Chernobyl!
Well, a wonderful book was produced by the Russians, and published by
the New York Academy of Sciences, called Chernobyl with over 5000 on the
ground studies of children and diseases in Belarus and the Ukraine, and
all over Europe. And by now over a million people have already died
from the Chernobyl disaster. And many diseases have been caused by that,
including premature aging in children, microcephaly in babies, very
small heads, diabetes, leukemia, I mean, I could go on and on.
And those diseases which have been very
well described in that wonderful book, which everyone should read, are
not being addressed or identified or looked for in the Fukushima or
Japanese population.
May I say that parts of Tokyo are
extremely radioactive. People have been measuring the dirt from roofs of
apartments, from the roadway, from vacuum cleaner dust. And some of
these samples, they’re so radioactive that they would classify to be
buried in radioactive waste facilities in America. So, that’s number
one.
Number two, to have the Olympics in
Fukushima just defies imagination. And some of the areas where the
athletes are going to be running, the dust and dirt there has been
measured, and it’s highly radioactive. So, this is Abe, the Prime
Minister of Japan, who set this up to – as a sort of way to obscure what
Fukushima really means. And those young athletes, you know, who are –
and young people are much more sensitive to radiation, developing
cancers later than older people – it’s just a catastrophe waiting to
happen.
GR: Dr. Caldicott…
HC:They’re calling it the radioactive Olympics!
GR: (Chuckle). Is there
anything that people can do, you know, whether they live in Japan or,
say, the west coast of North America to mitigate the effects that this
disaster has had, and may still be having eight years later?
HC: Yes. Do not
eat any Japanese food because you don’t know where it’s sourced. Do not
eat fish from Japan, miso, rice, you name it. Do not eat Japanese food.
Period. Fish caught off the west coast of Canada and America, well,
they’re not testing the fish so I don’t know what you’d do. I mean, most of it’s probably not radioactive but you don’t know because you can’t taste it.
They’ve closed down the air-borne radioactive measuring instruments off the west coast of America, but that’s pretty bad, because there still could be another huge accident at those reactors.
For instance, if there’s another large
earthquake, number one, all those tanks would be destroyed and the water
would pour into the Pacific. Number two, there could be another
meltdown, a release – huge release of radiation, from the damaged
reactors. So, things are very tenuous, but they’re not just tenuous now.
They’re going to be tenuous forever.
The Takeaway
The takeaway here is to simply learn
from our mistakes. To keep pushing for change and awareness and to
hammer home the idea that we must continue to speak up. The Fukushima
disaster is one of many great examples of how humanity cannot ignore the
“negatives” and only focus on the positives. We have to confront our
issues, face them, acknowledge them, and understand them.
No comments:
Post a Comment