Japan has told its citizens living in China to keep a low profile, including talking quietly in public, after Beijing blasted Tokyo for releasing treated radioactive water from a wrecked nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean.
Japan has told its citizens living in China to keep a low profile, including talking quietly in public, after Beijing blasted Tokyo for releasing treated radioactive water from a wrecked nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean.
Some cliff notes for those wondering what the fuss is about:
That’s rich, coming from China.
Yeah they launched a bunch of rockets at the ocean not that long ago so they can’t like it that much.
Fuck the CCP
When has China dumped radioactive waste with high levels of Strontium-90 and Carbon-14 into the ocean?
Except the waste water doesn’t actually have high levels of either of those, as it’s been diluted well below the safe minimums before release
Theres no actual science to back up the fears about their handling of this - just your standard “nuclear = bad and scary”
Wait till you guys find out about bananas
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abc1507
Different tanks have different concentrations.
Just because the average is safe doesn’t mean each discharge is.
Have a non-pay walled article?
Because nothing in what I can read of that article discounts what I said.
Specifically a non-pay walled article that backs up your assertions that some discharges are above safe levels
Figures on the last page.
Yeah well without a non-pay walled source, I can’t verify that
Why do people use football fields and swimming pools as units of measurement.
I can mentally picture an Olympic swimming pool, that’s why.
I need to get better at editing myself.
How much is that in giraffes?
Roughly 1651 girraffes, assuming an olympic swimming pool is 2.5 million litres.
I assume it’s to help people visualize volume/distance/size/etc. If an article said “50,000 gallons”, it would be much more precise, but also harder to relate to. When an article says “500 Olympic-sized pools”, it’s significantly easier to picture in my mind.
It’s also worth remembering that this is a newspaper intended for the casual edification of the general public, not a scientific document.
Tritium is useful as fuck, but I’m guessing there’s no way to harvest that for use if it’s the only thing remaining after it goes through The Alps?
ALPS isn’t perfect and Tepco has a track record of cutting corners. I’m rather skeptical about Tepco’s ability to do this properly.