26 Mai 2013
May 27, 2013
JIJI
GENEVA – Japan’s health survey on the effects of the March 2011 nuclear crisis should be expanded to include areas outside Fukushima Prefecture, a U.N. expert said.
The health management survey should be provided to residents in all affected areas by radiation exposure higher than 1 millisievert per year, Anand Grover, the U.N. special rapporteur on health, said in a report.
The report disputed the Japanese government’s decision to allow business activities to resume in areas with an exposure of 20 millisieverts or less per year.
“Evacuees should be recommended to return only when the radiation dose has been reduced as far as possible and to levels below 1 millisievert per year,” the report said.
Epidemiological studies “conclude that there is no low-threshold limit for excess radiation risk to non-solid cancers such as leukemia,” it said.
The report will be submitted to the U.N. Human Rights Council on Monday.
The report criticized the Japanese government for failing to give prompt orders for administering stable iodine to the public after the core meltdowns began at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant.
The report also said Japan failed to utilize the System for Prediction of Environment Emergency Dose Information, the computer simulator dubbed SPEEDI that projects the environmental spread of radioactive fallout, in a timely manner.
Many people who evacuated Fukushima to escape the fallout from the meltdowns ended up fleeing to places that were directly in the fallout paths projected by SPEEDI.
Kyodo
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won’t clarify his plan to reactivate nuclear power plants until it appears in the growth strategy to be released in mid-June just before the Upper House election in July, sources familiar with the matter said.
The draft energy policy states that steps will be taken to restart reactors deemed safe by the Nuclear Regulation Authority, the sources said Saturday.
The government will pledge to make utmost efforts to ensure safety at atomic power stations to gain support for restarting them in the municipalities that host them, they said.
May 26, 2013
A United Nations expert who investigated the aftermath of Japan's 2011 nuclear power plant disaster says the government and the operator of the facility should do more to help those affected by the catastrophe.
A report by special rapporteur Anand Grover, posted on the U.N. Human Rights Council's website, says the government's takeover of Tokyo Electric Power Co. allowed the utility to evade full responsibility for the nuclear disaster, the worst since Chernobyl.
The report points to problems with the handling of the crisis, including a difficult process for seeking compensation for radiation exposure, a lack of openness about health risks from radiation and inadequate protection for nuclear plant workers.
It urges Japan to improve its emergency preparedness and its handling of compensation claims.
The Geneva-based council is due to discuss the report, compiled after a visit to Japan by Grover late last year, at its general meeting starting on May 27.
Japan's atomic energy industry remains in crisis more than two years after a powerful earthquake and tsunami triggered meltdowns in three reactors at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant.
Over the weekend, the Japan Atomic Energy Agency reported a radiation leak at a research lab in the northern Japan town of Tokaimura, where at least two previous radiation accidents have occurred.
The U.N. report cited a number of "serious challenges" and urged the government to involve affected communities in decisions and do more to protect and help vulnerable groups such as children, pregnant women, the disabled and the elderly.
Most of Japan's nuclear plants remain closed after being shut down for safety checks following the Fukushima disaster. TEPCO and other utilities are accumulating massive losses due to reduced revenue and because of the costs of natural gas and crude oil to generate power.
Although TEPCO, the main power provider for the Tokyo region, was legally responsible for any liabilities from its nuclear operations, the government took over its management in the wake of the crisis.
That acquisition of a majority stake in the company "has arguably helped TEPCO to effectively avoid accountability and liability for damages," the U.N. report said.
Originally, seeking compensation involved a 60-page application form with 2,215 sections, the report said. Although the process has since been streamlined, the report said the government should address concerns over "TEPCO's attempts to reduce compensation levels and delay settlement."
The compensation should include financial relief to help the tens of thousands of residents displaced by the disaster rebuild their lives, it said.
So far, TEPCO has paid 2.3 trillion yen ($22.5 billion), about half of it to companies and business owners. That amount includes 1.6 million individual claims, mostly from voluntary evacuees. Because the amount of claims is expected to exceed the initial estimate of 3 trillion yen ($29 billion), the government has injected an additional 154 billion yen ($1.5 billion) into the compensation fund.
About 150,000 Fukushima residents are still displaced. Hundreds have filed claims seeking greater compensation, including many living outside the prefecture.
See also :
http://mainichi.jp/english/english/newsselect/news/20130526p2g00m0in044000c.html