Volunteers risk health in radiation cleanup outside Fukushima area
“The area itself is relatively highly contaminated,” Kodama says. “Many small children playing around the ground might touch some mud or in some case, eat some sand, which would result in internal radiation..”
Volunteers Take on Dangerous Job of Scrubbing Nuke Contamination, ABC News International. By AKIKO FUJITA (@akikofujita), Aug. 12, 2011 Tatsuhiko Kodama’s voice shakes as he addresses volunteers at Ishigami Daini Kindergarten in the city of Minamisoma, 15 miles from the troubled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant.
The director of the University of Tokyo’s Radioisotope Center is training people how to decontaminate a school filled with radiation spewed from the nuclear reactors. He has explained the process a dozen times before, yet tears well up every time Kodama sees mothers donning masks, fathers taking notes with dosimeters in hand.
“All of this is to protect your health,” he tells them. “We want to make sure there’s no negative impact on you or your health. We must protect our children.”
Kodama is leading a joint project with the local government to decontaminate neighborhoods just outside the government-mandated exclusion zone. His volunteers are carrying out an ambitious undertaking to lower radiation levels at all nurseries and schools, so children, the most vulnerable residents, can return this fall.
The plan calls for aerial monitoring devices to determine radiation levels on the ground, mapping the contamination, and training volunteers to decontaminate the areas accordingly. It’s a painstaking process that requires hours of pressure washing walls and playground equipment, and shoveling highly radiated soil from school grounds. Workers scrub down the roof with brooms, take radiation measurements at every step, then repeat the process until the number on the radiation counter falls below 0.1 microsievert per hour, the level of exposure considered safe for children.
That doesn’t come easily.
“The area itself is relatively highly contaminated,” Kodama says. “Many small children playing around the ground might touch some mud or in some case, eat some sand, which would result in internal radiation. [That’s why] we would like to remove this highly contaminated material first.”….
The government has announced plans to lift evacuation advisories for areas outside that zone. But it has yet to come up with a blueprint to decontaminate areas where radiation exposure exceeds 20 millisieverts a year, the maximum dosage allowed for average nuclear workers.
Tired of waiting, Minamisoma has drawn up a multimillion-dollar plan that largely relies on volunteers such as Yukari Kowata to cleanup,…..
University of Georgia professor Cham Dallas, who spent a decade studying the effects of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, says overall radiation levels have dropped in Fukushima schools, but the “hot spots” remain. While decontamination methods used in Minamisoma are effective in the short-term, Dallas says, pressure washing and scrubbing aren’t proper solutions for areas with dangerously high levels.
That’s what they did at Chernobyl, and it didn’t work,” Dallas said. “Radionuclides just keep moving around. Then you have to deal with it five years later, you have to deal with it 10 years later. Then it is 25 years later and you’re still dealing with radionuclides that could have been removed in the initial year, instead of just letting it move around.”
Volunteers Wear Dosimeters to Measure Radiaton as They Work
There are other concerns: where to store all the radioactive dirt and water removed from school grounds. Contaminated sludge has piled up at waste treatment centers in recent months, as the government mulls over its final resting place….
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