Fukushima water dump a tempest in a tritium pot

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
9 Min Read

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It is a huge amount of irradiated water from the Fukushima nuclear power complex that Japanese authorities have decided to dump into the sea. I suspect that at some point it is going to return to nature, whether we like it or not.

If I understand the facts correctly, this water is primarily radioactive due to tritium content. Thus it is not what is “dissolved” in the water but the water itself that is radioactive.

Tritium has a half-life of 12.3 years, which means that a little more than half of the tritium atoms that were left there at the time of the earthquake, tsunami and reactor meltdown in March 2011 are still there.

It decays into helium 3, which – though a bit exotic – is neither radioactive nor toxic nor environmentally impactful.

Tritium does not bioaccumulate. If you ingest it, half will be out of your system within a week or two weeks and there is no indication that that is different for any living species.

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