0
0
Loading version...
🔄 Update App
🔍 Check for Updates
Test Notification
🔔 Enable Notifications
📰 Fetch NHK News
🚀 Fetch TechCrunch News
🧪 Experiment
📰 Article Management
📚 Reading List
🎤 Speaking List
📊 Statistics
💻 Software Statistics
Push Admin
Edit Reading
Back to List
Basic Information
Title
Please enter a title.
URL
Please enter a valid URL.
Date
カテゴリID
画像ファイル名
統計情報
単語数:
199語
読了回数:
0回
作成日:
2023/03/12 08:22
更新日:
2025/12/09 06:24
本文
本文
Fishers in Fukushima are still struggling to overcome reputational damage to their products. Some are concerned about the planned release of treated and diluted water from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi power plant, which is scheduled to begin this spring or summer. Yotsuguri Hisamitsu lost his home to the tsunami and his livelihood to the nuclear crisis. He and his colleagues stopped shipping their catches after radioactive substances were detected in some of them. He resumed fishing four years later, but the region's fishing industry has not yet recovered to its pre-disaster level. Yotsuguri is worried that the treated water release may worsen the reputational damage. He said, "We fishers catch and sell fish. That's it. I just want them to be safe." Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, operates the nuclear plant. Water pumped in to cool the plant's molten fuel mixes with rain and groundwater. TEPCO has been treating it by filtering out most of the radioactive substances, but it can't remove the hydrogen isotope tritium. The water will be diluted with seawater before it is discharged. The government says the level of radioactive tritium will be lowered to one-seventh of World Health Organization standards for drinking water.
本文を入力してください。
メモ
メモ・感想
キャンセル
更新
Debug Info:
Saved State:
-
Redirected Flag:
-
Current URL:
-
Refresh
Close
Debug
Send Report
Send Report
Draw Arrow
Clear
Message:
Cancel
Send