Monday, March 12, 2012

More Municipalities Say Yes to Disaster Debris as Government Sends Formal Request to Prefectures to Accept It

The push for disaster debris that has been contaminated with radioactive fallout from Fukushima I Nuke Plant has reached an almost hysterical level with TV commercials, huge ads in the paper, and newspaper editorials calling anyone who doesn't want the debris burned in their neighborhood as "unpatriotic". Even a foreigner living in Japan, former Washington Post reporter, chimes in, rebuking the Japanese for refusing to "help" people in the disaster affected area.

Several cities in Okinawa Prefecture arefor accepting the debris. Kitakyushu City, who was once known for heavy pollution and now wants to be the environmental capital of the world, wants to accept and burn the debris. Governor of Kyoto wants it, as long as the government compensates for the damage from "baseless rumors" (such as the number of foreign tourists dropping to zero...). Cities in Shizuoka and Niigata want it, even if Governor of Niigata is dead set against it. Mayor of Yokohama, who is personally responsible in my opinion for feeding Yokohama's school children with radioactive beef, and ex-TV personality Governor of Kanagawa want to join Governor of Tokyo in merrily burning the debris and dump it in the Tokyo Bay. Wakkanai City in Hokkaido, the northern most part of Hokkaido right across from Russia's Sakhalin Island, wants to burn it. (Links are in Japanese.)

Money speaks. But that's not enough for PM Noda and his ministers. They want ALL prefectures to burn the debris which is contaminated with radioactive materials.

So, the Noda administration has decided to use the clause in the newly established special law for disaster debris processing and issue a formal written request to all prefectures in Japan except for Fukushima, Miyagi and Iwate, asking them to accept disaster debris.

At the same time, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry has just started a program to convince private businesses to take on the disaster debris for recycle - a sneaky backdoor approach, as often these businesses are large corporations that employ people in municipalities where the residents are often against accepting the debris contaminated with radioactive materials.

First, about the formal written request from the Noda administration, from Jiji Tsushin (3/13/2012):

政府は13日、東日本大震災で生じたがれきの広域処理を進めるため、国会内で関係閣僚会議(議長・野田佳彦首相)の初会合を開いた。細野豪志環境相は、災害廃棄物処理特別措置法に基づき、今週中に被災3県を除く44都道府県などに文書で受け入れを要請することを報告。会議では廃棄物を再生利用し、被災地での防災林や公園の整備に積極的に活用する方針も確認した。

The Noda administration held the first meeting of ministers involved in the wide-area disposal of disaster debris from the March 11, 2011 disaster (Prime Minister Noda as chairman). Minister of the Environment Goshi Hosono reported that he will send a formal written request based on the "Disaster Debris Disposal Special Measures" to all 44 prefectures excluding the 3 prefectures affected by the disaster [Fukushima, Miyagi, Iwate] that they accept the disaster debris. In the meeting, they confirmed the government policy to recycle the debris and use it to tend the disaster prevention forest and parks.

 冒頭、野田首相は「広域処理と再生利用の普及・拡大が進むよう、関係閣僚には一層の協力をお願いしたい」と述べた。

In the opening statement, Prime Minister Noda said "I ask all of you to increase your effort so that the wide-area disposal of the debris and recycling will be accepted and expanded."

And here's the effort by the Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yukio Edano of the "no immediate effect on health" fame, also from Jiji Tsushin (3/13/2012):

枝野幸男経済産業相は13日の閣議後の記者会見で、東日本大震災で生じたがれきの処理を推進するため、産業界に文書で協力を要請する方針を発表した。同日付で、セメント、製紙、鉄鋼、化学、電力などの業界団体に文書を出し、企業活動を通じたがれき処理への協力を呼び掛ける。

Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yukio Edano announced the Ministry's policy at the press conference after the cabinet meeting on March 13 to issue a written request for cooperation to the industries to promote the wide-area disposal of the disaster debris. The document, dated March 13, 2012, will be sent to the industry groups such as cement, paper, steel, chemicals, and electric power. The purpose is to request cooperation through corporate activities.

 経産省は昨年から被災地域の企業を中心に口頭で協力を要請しており、既に岩手県大船渡市でセメント会社が廃棄物を原料にしたり、宮城県石巻市で製紙会社が廃棄物をボイラー燃料にしたりしている。

The Ministry of Economy has made oral requests for cooperation to the local businesses in the disaster-affected areas since last year. Already, a cement company in Ofunato City in Iwate Prefecture uses the debris as part of the [cement] ingredients, and a paper company in Ishinomaki City in Miyagi Prefecture uses the debris as fuel for the boiler.

What a deceptive writing. If you get the feeling reading the last paragraph that the Ministry has been asking small local businesses affected by the disaster to use the debris for their small operations, like I did for a moment, you are conned. I immediately remembered who these companies are.

A cement company in Iwate Prefecture who's been mixing the radioactive ashes in the cement is the largest cement company in Japan, Taiheiyo Cement, who happens to have a factory in Iwate. A paper company who's been burning the debris in the boiler in its Miyagi factory is Nippon Paper Industries, the second largest paper company in Japan and the 10th largest in the world.

The same Taiheiyo Cement will burn the debris in its 2 factories in Saitama Prefecture, and use the ashes in the cement. Mitsubishi Materials will do the same.

Edano is lining up more big corporations, almost all of whom will be more than happy to oblige.

That silly commercial by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs says "Japan, a country of perseverance". The government seems determined to test the "perseverance" of the citizens.

11 comments:

kintaman said...

What I want to know is what is their motivation for trying to get all prefectures to accept waste and burn it?

• to increase cancer rates nation wide so TEPCO cannot be blamed for a rise in cancer in the Tohoku area?

• to eradicate the population of Japan?

• to send as much contaminant particles into the jetstream as possible to contaminate the entire world?

Please, what sense does this make in even in an insane world? How much cost and effort does it take to even ship the debris all over the nation? Why Okinawa which is on a separate land mass even? It is pure 100% insanity!

What is more insane is why the people are not stopping the government and taking power away. They are obviously corrupt, incompetent and murderous.

Anonymous said...

I think all the people who don;t like japanese are more enshrined in their beliefs and are joyous at the japanese' behaviour. Who needs that self extinctionary behaviour anyways, it's gonna happen "has, hot particles allllllover",,, and ther darwin award goes to...

Anonymous said...

Yes, I am puzzled as to why do they want to spread the radiation. Another deadful decision by the Government of Japan. Dilution is not the solution! The waste should be buried. Fukushima is the obvious place for a nuclear waste dump as no one should live there for hundreds of years. Dilution is also seen as the solution to radioactive food. Mix food with high levels of radiation with food containing low levels and presto, the food is deemed safe!

Atomfritz said...

"The same Taiheiyo Cement will burn the debris in its 2 factories in Saitama Prefecture, and use the ashes in the cement."

Maybe they should rename into Radium Cement.
Let's revive the radium hype of the 20th century :)

Alex Smith said...

I asked Arnie Gundersen about this plan to coerce all of Japan to take and burn debris coated with radioactivity, during the Vancouver Fukushima conference.
He said (1) it will invalidate epidemiology studies about increasing cancer rates in Japan. There won't be any uncontaminated area to compare to expected higher cancer rates near the Fukushima plume zone; and (2) it's insane to spread the radiation throughout the country. Gundersen suggests instead all the debris be hauled into the current evacuation zone, and the evacuees be told the truth: "you will never go home".
Concentrate the radioactivity in one place, rather than spreading it out by trucking, and then re-contaminating everything with the emissions of the incinerators.

Anonymous said...

Sure. Gundersen got his radioactive debris news from this blog.

What is he, a medical doctor?

Oh I forgot, he is now a best-selling author in Japan with his "book".

Darth3/11 said...

12:01pm Anon....Arnie Gundersen is quite an expert and voice of rationality. Your snarkiness is badly misplaced. Do some research.

arevamirpal::laprimavera said...

@Darth3/11, actually Gundersen was a reader of this blog at one point, I was told.

The voice of rationality seems debatable depending on who you ask. Some people were turned off in Japan when he held a press conference at the Japan Press Club (no independent journalists allowed) to promote his book.

Anonymous said...

I got on the Hankyu train in Osaka yesterday and every carriage was plastered with posters of debris and the 'we expect you to do your bit' message. This even though our oberfuhrer Fashimoto has already decided to accept debris on our behalf. Disgusted.

Atomfritz said...

If Gundersen reads Enenews, then I am quite sure that he is a reader of Ex-SKF, too.
He just doesn't give credit to his sources.
The same goes with Christoph Schneider whose blog tec-sim.de is the best German-language site about Fukushima I know of.
However, sometimes one can note when they suddenly start talking about things LaPrimavera recently made aware of in his blog.
Then you get some feeling who probably was the source...

Thank you again Ultraman for cracking open the Godzillian wall of silence :)

Anonymous said...

I hope the Japanese are causing a stir about this and tweeting themselves into sanity. I cannot believe the gov't is investing this much money into something that is completely unnecessary. If for no other reason, shouldn't citizens be upset about the costs involved with this program?!

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