Perilous
Times
Japan: Massive Fukushima caesium radiation leaks 'equal 168
Hiroshimas'
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 25, 2011
Japan's government estimates the amount of radioactive caesium-137
released by the Fukushima nuclear disaster so far is equal to that
of 168 Hiroshima bombs, a news report said Thursday.
Government nuclear experts, however, said the World War II bomb
blast and the accidental reactor meltdowns at Fukushima, which has
seen ongoing radiation leaks but no deaths so far, were beyond
comparison.
The amount of caesium-137 released since the three reactors were
crippled by the March 11 quake and tsunami has been estimated at
15,000 tera becquerels, the Tokyo Shimbun reported, quoting a
government calculation.
That compares with the 89 tera becquerels released by "Little
Boy", the uranium bomb the United States dropped on the western
Japanese city in the final days of World War II, the report said.
The estimate was submitted by Prime Minister Naoto Kan's cabinet
to a lower house committee on promotion of technology and
innovation, the daily said.
The government, however, argued that the comparison was not valid.
While the Hiroshima bomb claimed most of its victims in the
intense heatwave of a mid-air nuclear explosion and the highly
radioactive fallout from its mushroom cloud, no such nuclear
explosions hit Fukushima.
There, the radiation has seeped from molten fuel inside reactors
damaged by hydrogen explosions.
"An atomic bomb is designed to enable mass-killing and
mass-destruction by causing blast waves and heat rays and
releasing neutron radiation," the Tokyo Shimbun daily quoted a
government official as saying. "It is not rational to make a
simple comparison only based on the amount of isotopes released."
Government officials were not immediately available to confirm the
report.
The blinding blast of the Hiroshima bomb and its fallout killed
some 140,000 people, either instantly or in the days and weeks
that followed as high radiation or horrific burns took their toll.
At Fukushima, Japan declared a 20-kilometre (12 mile) evacuation
and no-go zone around the plant after the March 11 quake and
tsunami triggered the world's worst nuclear accident since
Chernobyl 25 years ago.
A recent government survey showed that some areas within the
20-kilometre zone are contaminated with radiation equivalent to
more than 500 millisieverts per year -- 25 times more than the
government's annual limit.