LatestTop NewsWorld

Japan grapples with recycling challenge



This photo taken on April 24, 2025, shows shovels on a plot of land managed by a company hoping to revitalise agriculture in the area by growing kiwi fruit in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture. — AFP
This photo taken on April 24, 2025, shows shovels on a plot of land managed by a company hoping to revitalise agriculture in the area by growing kiwi fruit in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture. — AFP

Following the 2011 nuclear tragedy, authorities removed a layer of contaminated soil from large areas of land in order to lower radiation levels throughout the northern Fukushima region of Japan.

While authorities are considering what to do with the amount of removed soil, which is enough to fill more than 10 baseball stadiums, young farmers work to revitalise the area that was previously recognised for its mouthwatering fruit.

Here are some key things to know:

Radiation worries

On March 11, 2011, Japan’s strongest earthquake on record triggered a huge tsunami that hit the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, causing a devastating meltdown.

Topsoil was collected as part of large-scale decontamination efforts that also included blasting buildings and roads with high-pressure jets of water.

Almost all areas of Fukushima have gradually been declared safe, but many evacuees have been reluctant to return because they remain worried about radiation, or have fully resettled elsewhere.

Fukushima has, however, welcomed new residents such as 25-year-old kiwi farmer Takuya Haraguchi.

“I want people to become interested in and learn about what Fukushima is really like these days,” he said.

Huge mounds of soil

A vast quantity of soil — 14 million cubic metres — is being stored at interim storage facilities near the Fukushima Daiichi plant.

The government has promised residents of Fukushima region that it will find permanent storage for the soil elsewhere in the country by 2045.

For now, the huge mounds are kept inside guarded grounds, protected by layers of clean soil and a manmade sheet to prevent runoff into the environment.

Soil’s reuse

The government wants to use the soil for building road and railway embankments among other projects.

It has vowed to do this outside Fukushima to avoid further burdening the region, where the crippled nuclear plant generated electricity not for local residents, but for Tokyo and its surrounding urban areas.

So far, few takers have been found in other parts of Japan, and some local officials suggest that realistically, a portion of the soil may need to stay in Fukushima.

The prime minister’s office recently said it would symbolically recycle some of the soil to show it is safe, with reports saying it will be used in flower beds.

Radioactivity level

Around 75% of the stored soil has a radioactivity level equivalent to or less than one X-ray per year for people who directly stand on or work with it, according to the environment ministry.

Asphalt, farm soil or layers of other materials should be used to seal in the radioactivity, said Akira Asakawa, a ministry official working on the Fukushima soil project.

In a test, the government has constructed roads and fields in Fukushima by using the contaminated soil as filling material.

Those locations did not show elevated levels of radioactivity, and there was no runoff of radioactive material to surrounding areas, Asakawa said.

Pushback

In 2022, local communities reacted angrily to plans floated by the national government to bring the Fukushima soil to a popular park in Tokyo and other areas near the capital.

That plan has not moved forward and other locations have not yet been secured, despite public sympathy for the people of Fukushima.

The environment ministry says it will step up efforts to explain the safety of its plan to the public from this year.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button