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Chernobyl and Fukushima taught the world what
should have been on the back cover of this story |
What’s
On the Beach? The title refers to the
famous 1957 novel (and later film adaptations) about the encroaching nuclear
winter that comes to Australia after global nuclear war in the Northern Hemisphere.
Fifty years ago, everyone thought that this was the existential risk we faced,
but the Cold War subsided and World War III was avoided. What caught everyone
by surprise was Chernobyl and Fukushima, the risks of even greater accidents, and
the lingering dangers involved in nuclear waste disposal, which really hasn’t
even begun seventy years after the dawn of the nuclear age. Nuclear accidents
have shown us that the threat all along was just as much in the slow motion
nuclear war (a phrase coined by Robert Jacobs in this
article) that accompanied the “peaceful” use of the atom.
This
article asks not only “What’s On the
Beach?” but also “What’s on the beach?” Now that the Japanese authorities
have admitted the serious problems with leaking radioactive water from
Fukushima Daiichi, and now that the world has grasped the risk posed by the site’s
spent fuel pools, we may be ready to ask about the future implications of all
this pollution spreading along Japan’s northeastern coast.
Much
of the concern outside of Japan has been about the spread of radiation into
fish stocks and across the Pacific Ocean. There have already been low levels of
radionuclides measured in fish in California. While some scientist say the
damage could be horrific, even some anti-nuclear critics are refraining from
saying there will be an impact on health. Besides, the oceans have other
problems such as acidification, over-fishing, nitrogen runoff from fertilizer, and
the great Pacific garbage patch.
Chris
Busby, well-known as a long-time critic of the nuclear industry, has said that
people in California can relax. The ocean will dilute what Fukushima is dishing
out. It would be better to consider how people are going to be impacted along
the coast of Japan. In an interview with Russia Today, he described the problem:
The contamination of the sea results
in adsorption of the radionuclides by the sand and silt on the coast and river
estuaries. The east coast of Japan, the sediment and sand on the shores,
will now be horribly radioactive. This material is re-suspended into the
air through a process called sea-to-land transfer. The coastal air they
inhale is laden with radioactive particles… We looked at small area data leaked
to us by the Welsh Cancer Registry covering the period of 1974-1989, when
Sellafield was releasing significant amounts of radio-cesium, radio-strontium,
and plutonium. Results showed a remarkable and sharp 30 per cent increase
in cancer rates in those living within 1km of the coast. The effect was
very local and dropped away sharply at 2km… Make no mistake, this is a deadly
effect. By 2003, we had found 20-fold excess risk of leukemia and brain
tumors in the population of children on the north Wales coast… the sea-to-land
effect is real. And anyone living within 1km of the coast to at least
200km north or south of Fukushima should get out. They should evacuate
inland. It is not eating the fish and shellfish that gets you - it’s breathing.
So
that’s something to think about for the Japanese government that wants to
rebuild the communities that were destroyed by the tsunami. We might have to
say now that the waves destroyed the towns, and the meltdowns made sure they
would never come back. Or we have to say rather should never come back. The Japanese government is likely to ignore
this hazard and encourage people to resettle the coast.
The
problems with radioactive sand and silt are well-known near the old nuclear bomb
and fuel factory in Sellafield, UK. The issue was covered by The
Guardian last
year. The article reports on the beach pollution that Dr. Busby discussed. It
quotes a Health Protection Agency official as saying, "No special precautionary
actions are required at this time to limit access to, or use of, beaches."
A Sellafield spokesman concurred, saying, "… the overall health risk to
beach users is very low and significantly lower than other risks people accept
when using beaches. It should be noted that people visiting beaches in places
on the south coast, such as Devon or Cornwall, will receive a far higher dose
of radiation, from naturally occurring background radiation, than those
visiting beaches close to Sellafield."
In
these two brief quotes we see a rather stunning display of the moral confusion
that is typical in the official dismissals of the concerns that the public has about
man-made radiation. It consists of three features:
1.
The conflation of natural,
unavoidable risks with those imposed by human agency upon non-consenting
populations.
If
I walk into a cancer ward and light up a cigarette, I can’t object to being
told to step outside with it. I can’t say that the cigarette is insignificant
compared to the overall health risks that cancer patients accept when submitting
to chemotherapy and staying in germ-filled hospitals. Yet somehow this way of
thinking is allowable in the official rationalizations of man-made pollution.
Imposed, unnecessary risks are considered equal to unavoidable risks.
2.
Minimizing the effect of added
man-made radiation by pointing to natural background radiation.
This
is subset of point 1. It excuses a willful act of contamination by likening it
to that which is not caused by human agency. The point is always made in a
condescending way, as if the non-expert is too dim to understand the risks of
the world he lives in. But it is actually the experts who have a diminished
capacity here. A normal person can see that it is the same difference as
between death by a lightning strike and homicide. We accept natural misfortunes
but reserve our moral outrage for humans who commit deliberate harm.
3.
Willful neglect of internal emitters
of radiation, namely beta and alpha emitters, and neglect of the chemical
effects of pollution from nuclear facilities.
The
Sellafield spokesman referred to background radiation, which is normally a
measure of gamma radiation that can be picked up by any cheap dosimeter. Any amateur
who has learned a little about radiation will agree that the gamma dose on
these British beaches is not the thing to be concerned about. The official
health studies of atomic bombings, in Japan and in nuclear testing throughout
the world, persistently ignored the damage done by internal contamination, and
this comment by the Sellafield spokesman shows that the tradition is still
alive. We can be sure that it will continue as people begin to ask troubling
questions about what is blowing in the sea breeze on Japanese shores.
The
article in The Guardian pointed out
that the Health Protection Agency (not the Sellafield spokesman) did concede
that there are uncertainties in the beach monitoring. The article pointed out
that the HPA added:
… the latest equipment might miss
tiny specks that could be inhaled, as well as buried alpha radioactivity that could give rise to a significant risk to
health if ingested. Documents released under freedom of information law show
that in 2010 the Environment Agency agreed that monitoring for contamination on
the beaches should avoid peak periods such as during bank holidays. This
followed a complaint from St. Bees parish council expressing "strong
concern that this would have an adverse impact on tourism.
Ah,
yes. Save the economy. During the Vietnam war, US officers claimed with knowing
irony that they had to “destroy the village in order to save it.” In peacetime,
the phrase becomes “destroy the people in order to save their jobs.”
Further reading on the novel and the 1961 film On the Beach:
Mick Broderick, "Fallout On the Beach," Screening the Past, 37, June, 2013.
Finally, a
somewhat gratuitous reference to Neil Young’s On the Beach. I don’t think Neil was thinking of nuclear meltdowns,
but some of the lines evoke my present unease about being on the beach.
Neil Young
On the Beach, track 6, 19:00~
The world is turnin', I hope
it don't turn away,
The world is turnin', I hope it don't turn away.
All my pictures are fallin' from the wall where
I placed them yesterday…
Though my problems are meaningless, that don't
make them go away…
Now I'm livin' out here on the beach, but those
seagulls are still out of reach…
Get out of town, think I'll get out of town.
I head for the sticks with my bus and friends,
I follow the road, though I don't know where it
ends.
Get out of town, get out of town, think I'll get
out of town.
'Cause the world is turnin', I don't want to see
it turn away.