男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Global Reaction

Japan nuclear health risks low, won't blow abroad

(Agencies)
Updated: 2011-03-14 05:42
Large Medium Small

OSLO?- Health risks from Japan's quake-hit nuclear power reactors seem fairly low and winds are likely to carry any contamination out to the Pacific without threatening other nations, experts say.

Tokyo battled to avert a meltdown at three stricken reactors at the Fukushima plant in the worst nuclear accident since the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, triggered by Friday's tsunami. Radiation levels were also up at the Onagawa atomic plant.

"This is not a serious public health issue at the moment," Malcolm Crick, Secretary of the U.N. Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, told Reuters.

"It won't be anything like Chernobyl. There the reactor was operating at full power when it exploded and it had no containment," he said.

As a precaution, around 140,000 people have been evacuated from the area around Fukushima.

Crick said a partial meltdown of the Three Mile Island plant in the United States in 1979 -- rated more serious than Japan's accident on an international scale -- released low amounts of radiation.

"Many people thought they'd been exposed after Three Mile Island," he said. "The radiation levels were detectable but in terms of human health it was nothing."

Radiation can cause cancers. The World Health Organization (WHO) also said the public health risk from Japan's atomic plants remained "quite low". The quake and devastating tsunami may have killed 10,000 people.

Winds blow to Pacific

The Japan Meteorological Agency said that the winds in the area would shift from the south to a westerly on Sunday night, blowing from Fukushima towards the Pacific Ocean.

"The wind direction is right for people in Japan. It's blowing out to the Pacific," Lennart Carlsson, director of Nuclear Power Plant Safety in Sweden, told Reuters. "I don't think this will be any problem to other countries."

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said on Sunday it does not expect "any harmful levels" of radiation to reach its shores.

"All the available information indicates weather conditions have taken the small releases from the Fukushima reactors out to sea away from the population," the NRC said in a statement.

"Given the thousands of miles between the two countries, Hawaii, Alaska, the U.S. Territories and the U.S. West Coast are not expected to experience any harmful levels of radioactivity."

In contrast, the Chernobyl accident was discovered after radiation was detected at Sweden's Forsmark nuclear power -- more than a day after the explosion that Moscow had not publicly acknowledged -- and radiation blew across Europe.

Crick said that time is a big help for reducing health risks since many of the most damaging nuclear effects, such as radio iodines, dissipate within hours or days. He said a meltdown can be contained in a sealed reactor.

Japan's biggest earthquake on record on Friday knocked out the back-up cooling systems at Fukushima, north of Tokyo, causing a build-up of heat and pressure. An explosion hit the plant on Saturday.

U.N. studies have projected only a few thousand extra deaths caused by radiation from Chernobyl. Thirty workers died, almost all from radiation, in the immediate aftermath of the disaster.

Crick said the clearest sign of damage on health was that about 6,000 people aged under 18 at the time of Chernobyl had developed thyroid cancer -- usually only affecting older people. Fallout on farmland may have raised radioactive levels in milk.

But he said that studies in what is now Ukraine, Belarus and Russia showed that the average increase per person in long-term radiation exposure was equivalent to one CT scan -- a specialised x-ray of the body.

Environmental group Greenpeace disagrees sharply and has projected a death toll of up to 93,000 from Chernobyl.

Japan has rated the Fukushima accident at four on an international scale -- meaning an accident with local consequences -- against Chernobyl which was worst at seven on the 1-7 scale. Three Mile Island rated a five. ? ?WHO spokeswoman Christy Feig said there was no request to mobilise radiation experts known as REMPAN (Radiation Emergency Medical Preparedness and Assistance Network) set up after Chbernobyl.

分享按鈕
主站蜘蛛池模板: 宾川县| 札达县| 沙雅县| 调兵山市| 景东| 凤山县| 手游| 驻马店市| 安西县| 巨野县| 荔波县| 南丹县| 神池县| 丹寨县| 朔州市| 泸州市| 青海省| 双牌县| 饶阳县| 新丰县| 伊通| 缙云县| 盐津县| 恩施市| 茂名市| 长沙市| 广汉市| 利津县| 亳州市| 三亚市| 镇赉县| 温泉县| 镶黄旗| 霍山县| 乐亭县| 平塘县| 黄浦区| 大理市| 临海市| 内黄县| 车致| 方正县| 屏山县| 昭平县| 乐安县| 文登市| 新兴县| 吉林市| 华坪县| 灌阳县| 丹凤县| 洛浦县| 宿迁市| 抚顺县| 金秀| 博湖县| 封开县| 攀枝花市| 新化县| 长沙市| 泉州市| 卫辉市| 齐齐哈尔市| 井陉县| 巴楚县| 英德市| 塔河县| 北安市| 仙桃市| 台东市| 麻城市| 临西县| 齐齐哈尔市| 陵水| 西乌| 娄烦县| 东丰县| 宁安市| 洞头县| 鸡西市| 刚察县| 平远县|