Indigenous communities worry the decision will compound existing health disparities.

Editor鈥檚 note: This story by senior staff writer is reprinted with . You can subscribe to its .

Danity Laukon was sitting in her bedroom in her two-bedroom flat in Suva, Fiji, when she got the call. It was November 2021, and her dad, more than 1,800 miles away at her home in Majuro in the Marshall Islands, had died after a battle with diabetes. 

He was 50 years old.

Diabetes is not an illness that is directly caused by radiation. But Laukon believes that American nuclear testing in the Pacific played a role in his early death. 

After years of nuclear bomb detonations in the Marshall Islands, fallout and forced relocations of communities began a ripple effect: Many Indigenous Marshallese people who had relied on subsistence farming and fishing for 4,000 years suddenly couldn鈥檛 trust the safety of their food, becoming reliant on imported products and unhealthy, non-native processed foods.

And those were the lucky ones. On Utrik atoll, where Laukon鈥檚 maternal family is from, many residents fell ill from acute radiation sickness. 

Aerial_photo_of_Fukushima_Daiichi_Nuclear_Power_Plant_2021
Japan has begun releasing wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean. (Courtesy: Japanese Government/Wikimedia Commons) 

Now she鈥檚 worried her community will face even more health risks. On Thursday, the government of Japan began releasing wastewater from the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean and plans to continue to do so gradually for the next 30 years. 

Japan is treating the water before it is poured into the sea, but the water will still contain low levels of radioactive contaminants that can鈥檛 be removed.

Japan promises that the levels of contaminants present will be significantly lower than international health standards and has gained the support of a key United Nations agency. But some scientists remain concerned about how little is known about potential long-term effects of the wastewater.

Running Out Of Room

Japanese officials declined to speak on the record about their plans but have publicly outlined an argument that the country is running out of room to store contaminated water from the nuclear power plant and that another earthquake 鈥 similar to the quake that damaged the plant 鈥 could release the stored water before being treated.

The plan now is to treat contaminated water, then dilute it into the Pacific Ocean over the course of three decades in order to more quickly decommission the nuclear facility.

In 2011, a 9.1-magnitude earthquake struck Japan, causing a tsunami that  and  to the Fukushima nuclear plant. In the hours after, three nuclear reactors melted down, forcing the evacuation of more than 100,000 people. Radioactive water spilled into the Pacific and was carried east by currents toward the United States. Two and a half years later, radiation from the plant was detected in waters off California, but 

In the decade since, Japan has erected more than 1,000 tanks to store more than a million tons of water from Fukushima: rainwater, groundwater, and water pumped into the facility to cool the damaged reactors. Once treated, that water will be poured into the Pacific for the next three decades.

Japanese officials have promised that the levels of contaminants present in the wastewater will be significantly lower than international health standards, and last month, the International Atomic Energy Agency, a United Nations agency that oversees nuclear energy, greenlit the plan when  describing the wastewater as having a 鈥渘egligible radiological impact on people and the environment.鈥 

Demonstrators outside the Hawaii State Capitol protested Japan’s plans to dump treated nuclear wastewater into the ocean. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2023)

However, some scientists remain concerned about how little is known about potential long-term effects of that wastewater, while many Indigenous peoples in the Pacific, like Laukon, worry that the move will add an additional burden to the health disparities communities already face. For Laukon, Japan鈥檚 decision is an extension of a long-running history of using the Pacific as a dumping ground for nuclear waste.

鈥淚t鈥檚 giving us more to deal with,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t feels helpless.鈥 

Health Concerns

During the Cold War, Britain, France, and the U.S. tested more than 300 nuclear bombs across the Pacific regions of Polynesia and Micronesia as well as in the deserts of Australia. After a detonation in the Marshall Islands,  that fell from the sky that later turned out to be calcium debris from the fallout. Radioactive debris clung to the coconut oil of women鈥檚 hair. 

At Fukushima, one concern about the discharge is around tritium, a radioactive isotope produced in nuclear reactors that can鈥檛 be removed through Japan鈥檚 treatment process.

Japanese officials say that once the wastewater mixes into the ocean one kilometer off of Japan鈥檚 shores, the amount of tritium present is expected to be well below the World Health Organization鈥檚 standards for drinking water quality 鈥搕he WHO limit of 10,000 becquerels per liter; levels comparable to those in water released from normally-operating nuclear power plants in China, the United Kingdom and Canada. 

Japan says the discharge is safe, but Timothy Mousseau isn鈥檛 so sure. The biologist and professor at the University of South Carolina and author of an exhaustive review of  currently awaiting publication.

鈥淭he bottom line from my perspective is that (tritium) has been insufficiently studied to be making hard promises about the long-term safety of this kind of release,鈥 Mousseau said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 actually really understand what the potential ramifications of a massive point source of tritium will be on the natural environment.鈥

While exposure to tritium through swimming or drinking water isn鈥檛 a risk, the radioactive isotope can bioaccumulate through the food chain. Studies of mice and rats suggest that ingesting tritium could lead to cancer and fertility problems, Mousseau said, but whether that would happen in humans isn鈥檛 clear because the radioactive isotope hasn鈥檛 been studied enough.

An IAEA fact-finding team examined Reactor Unit 3 at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant to assess tsunami damage and study nuclear safety lessons that could be learned from the accident. (Courtesy: Greg Webb/IAEA/2011)

鈥淲e really don鈥檛 know whether there will be a significant hazard to humans at the end of the food chain,鈥 said Mousseau. 

That potential to impact the food chain is a big concern to Robert Richmond, director of the Kewalo Marine Laboratory at the University of 贬补飞补颈驶颈 and a professor who specializes in marine conservation biology and coral reefs. 

Richmond is part of a  advising the Pacific Islands Forum, the chief diplomatic body representing Pacific island nations, on Japan鈥檚 plan.

In February, he visited Japan to meet with the country鈥檚 scientists about the release. He left unimpressed by the lack of data they provided regarding the contents of their water tanks and the effectiveness of their treatment system. 

鈥淲hen they say the science is impeccable 鈥 no, anything but,鈥 he said. 

Other Viable Alternatives?

Richmond and his fellow scientists saw red flags in what data did exist including inconsistencies and poorly designed sampling protocols. One of Richmond鈥檚 colleagues, Kenneth Buesseler, is a marine radiochemist and senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

Buesseler says the water flowing through the plant is exposed to more radiation than cooling water in normally functioning nuclear reactors because it鈥檚 in direct contact with molten coil. That means the water will need to be treated multiple times to reach the health standards that Japan has promised. He doesn鈥檛 believe Japan has effectively demonstrated that its treatment system can consistently remove the high levels of dangerous compounds present in the wastewater. 

He also doubts that there鈥檚 an urgent need to get rid of the water and says Japan should consider other viable alternatives. The rush to discharge the water, Richmond said, suggests Japan is choosing the cheapest, most politically expedient method to get rid of the nuclear waste rather than doing what鈥檚 best for its neighbors and the ocean, which is already stressed from the effects of climate change, plastic pollution and ocean acidification.  

鈥淥nce you鈥檝e made a mistake, there鈥檚 no turning back, and all the monitoring in the world does nothing to protect ecosystems or the people who depend on them,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t simply tells you when you鈥檙e screwed and that doesn鈥檛 really do anything.鈥  

Pacific opposition to the plan was initially strong, but after Japanese officials carried out a  to sway public opinion including meeting with Pacific leaders, several expressed support, most recently Fiji Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka.

On Twitter on Tuesday, Rabuka called the comparison of Japan鈥檚 controlled wastewater discharge to historic nuclear testing in the Pacific 鈥渇ear mongering.鈥 

鈥淚t鈥檚 impossible to compare those nuclear tests with the careful discharge of treated wastewater from Fukushima over a period of approximately 30 years,鈥 he wrote.

But other leaders,  remain unconvinced. Sheila Babauta, a former legislator from the U.S. Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, abbreviated as CNMI, authored a resolution that condemned Japan鈥檚 plan in 2021. Today, she remains resolute in her opposition.

鈥淚鈥檓 deeply concerned for the people of the CNMI and how decisions by major world powers are being made without our knowledge and how that鈥檚 going to impact our lives today and for future generations,鈥 she said.

On Tuesday, Laukon was visiting Honolulu, and woke up to Facebook messages from friends asking her about Japan鈥檚 plan to release the wastewater that week. What could they do? Could they put out a statement criticizing the plans? Would it make a difference? 

It took her a while for the reality to sink in 鈥 the fact that what she and others had been campaigning against was actually happening. 

鈥淭o be honest, it feels helpless to really voice what you want to say because does it matter? Are they listening?鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it does matter. Whatever we do now will still affect later generations. And that鈥檚 why I鈥檓 worried.鈥

It was hard to put how she felt into words. What could she say that could capture the feeling she had about what she feared, what this big decision that was so far out of her control meant for her people? 

She finished composing a poem she had started writing last week in Fiji. It was about a turtle who lays eggs under the full moon, only to realize they won鈥檛 hatch. 

鈥淯nder a full moon / I see raindrops / blue water / an island is grieving / in silence,鈥 she wrote.

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