Last month I joined the magnificent crew of the Rainbow Warrior,
a team of experts, and Greenpeace colleagues from around the world. For
two days we sailed along Fukushima’s beautiful, rugged coast working
under rough conditions as the ship swayed along one-meter swells, and
doing our best not to succumb to seasickness.
Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior sailing past the destroyed Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, five years after the accident.
For 14 years I’ve been with the environmental
organisation and throughout my career have experienced the stereotypical
life of a “Greenpeace-er” – I’ve been arrested for
revealing corruption in the whale meat market, helped stop toxic
plastics in infant toys, worked to stop ocean dumping of industrial
waste, and of course have had many unique opportunities on the Rainbow
Warrior. Now, as I prepare to leave my position as Executive Director of
Greenpeace Japan, I realise that this could be my last time on this
gorgeous ship.
Junichi Sato, Executive Director of Greenpeace Japan
But this journey has specific significance.
I’ve joined the Rainbow Warrior crew and a research team to investigate the marine impacts of radioactive contamination from the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster.
It was on this day, five years ago when a tsunami, triggered by a 9.0 magnitude earthquake rocked Japan. 15,894 people died and 2,561 still remain unaccounted for - a tragedy that we commemorate and will continue to mourn. Sadly, the disaster didn’t end there. More than 146,000 people
living in nearby towns were forced to evacuate due to the nuclear
disaster, of which 100,000 remain and have been unable to return. We
know that levels of nuclear radiation are still high in some of the
areas– figures that the Japanese government have not been telling us –
and this is why we’re here. For the people, for the country, and to
remind the world that a nuclear disaster is on-going and never-ending.
Greenpeace
divers hold up banners reading “Never again” during sampling operations
off the coast of Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, Japan (March 2016)
Former Japanese Prime Minister Mr Naoto Kan was also
on board and it’s been a privilege to be sailing with him. During our
few days on the ship Mr Kan shared some personal stories: the stresses
and strains of having to deal with a crisis of this magnitude; dealing
with Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), the owner of the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear plant; and how he went through the very real decision of
whether or not to evacuate Tokyo.
The agony and the experience of witnessing the event up close has
turned him from being a supporter of nuclear power, to a staunch
opponent.
Former
Prime Minister of Japan, Mr Naoto Kan, onboard the Rainbow Warrior. He
has restated his opposition to nuclear power, and called for Japan’s
energy policy to be based on renewable energy.
Not much has changed in five years. As we sailed within 2km of the Fukushima Nuclear Daiichi Plant, it looks in almost the same disastrous state
that it was five years ago; and in abandoned towns like Iitate and
Namie hundreds of thousands of bags of decontaminated waste pile up
along the street and the roadside.
But with more awareness in the community and people
power rising, the honest truth about what happened five years ago is
beginning to emerge. Three former TEPCO bosses have been charged
for allegedly failing to take proper safety measures on Fukushima
Daiichi, despite being aware of the risk from a tsunami. And despite
claims that TEPCO has been footing the cleanup costs, it has since been
revealed that Japanese taxpayers have been footing the almost US$100bn bill.
Greenpeace
nuclear expert takes radiation measurements with a Geiger counter
around and inside the house of Hiroshi Kanno, a vegetable farmer
evacuated from Iitate village after Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster.
But it’s not just Fukushima where this has happened. It’s been 30 years since Chernobyl and the nuclear costs are still ongoing.
The Fukushima and Chernobyl disasters remind us we
need to bury nuclear energy in the past and transition to clean, safe
renewables. Even today - five years after Fukushima and 30 years after
Chernobyl - these disasters continue to cause immense human suffering.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to abandon their homes.
Millions more live in contaminated areas.
For the thousands of lives lost – not just from the
Fukushima disaster but also from the earthquake – we need to shift to a
renewable future. Together we can stop nuclear accidents like Fukushima or Chernobyl from ever happening again.
Junichi Sato is the Executive Director at Greenpeace Japan.
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