?An energy map provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows the intensity of the tsunami in the Pacific Ocean caused by the magnitude 8.9 earthquake which struck Japan on March 11, 2011. I think it's because they keep telling us we're going to lose everything. But Monbiot shows—as does this map—that even world-class disasters can inspire optimism rather than despair. So not surveillance. For example, potassium is everywhere. "The so-called Holy Fire at Elsinore Lake in California, September 2018.The map surfaced in 2013, when Japan's Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NRA) warned that highly radioactive water from the destroyed nuclear plant at Fukushima was seeping into the Pacific Ocean, creating an emergency that operator Tepco seemed unable to contain.Humanity is the proverbial frog in the pot. Starosta reported that in his study, cesium-137 “levels found in both the salmon and soil samples remained below Canada’s safety guidelines, posing minimal health risk to B.C.’s salmon and human populations.” The use of the word “minimal” by Starosta is a trivialization of “some” risk, especially when considered in view of the cumulative effect of eating contaminated fish over a lifetime. Is it organic or not? Greenpeace issued a report Jan. 22, 2019 condemning the plan, reminding the public that the owners/operators of Fukushima — Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) — admitted in 2018 that its waste water treatment system (the Advanced Liquid Processing System or ALPS) had failed. Will it?Oh wait. "We're all going to lose the planet. I mean, don't get me wrong, I 100% believe in climate change. Figure 1. “The Pacific Ocean is an enormous place,” said Norman, who found radiation from the Fukushima nuclear power in California rainwater, milk and plants soon after the earthquake and tsunami. 2019 Report: Radiation and the Pacific Ocean. "A crappy old plant with inadequate safety features was hit by a monster earthquake and a vast tsunami. Like most greens, I favor a major expansion of renewables. This whole episode should be like a telethon or something. Certainly. Note the absence of a map legend.This study has linked female porn consumption to orgasms that are easier to achieve and more satisfying during both masturbation and partnered sex.The map suggests that the world's largest ocean has been lost to radiation and should now be approached with as much suspicion as the exclusion zone around Chernobyl.Controversial? How bad was the radioactive fallout from the nuclear disaster in Japan? But it's not. In October of 2012, Albacore tuna caught off Washington and Oregon and Blue fin tuna off of California were also found contaminated with Fukushima cesium. However, since cesium-137 is a reactor-borne element not found in nature, the established 100 Bq/kg limit is arbitrary.
Media representatives were invited in to the facility for the first time since the incident just this past November, as Fukushima University researchers measured radiation levels inside. Radioactive water is continuing to flow into the Pacific Ocean from the site of three mangled reactors at a rate of around 2 billion Becquerels a day, according to a 2018 Japanese study, the Japan Times reported March 29, 2018. Cesium-137 has been found in Canadian fish as well. A map of Fukushima radiation spreading and contaminating the Pacific Ocean is a fake.