Tuesday

19th Mar 2024

EU plans tougher radiation limits for Japanese food

The European Union is preparing to tighten radiation limits on Japanese food and animal feed imports, as low-level radioactive seawater used for cooling reactors at the crisis-stricken Fukushima plant is returned to the sea.

The lower permissible thresholds will bring the EU into line with tougher domestic limits in Japan, and are likely to be agreed by member states this Friday (8 April).

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  • A Japanese fish market. The EU imports some seafood products from Japan (Photo: Mike Lee)

Speaking to MEPs in Strasbourg on Tuesday, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso described the measures as "purely precautionary".

"The commission believes it would be correct to amend the present levels in force since March 25 as an additional safeguard measure," Barroso told the euro-deputies. He noted that Europe's current thresholds were agreed following Ukraine's 1986 nuclear accident at Chernobyl.

"We have decided that on a transitional basis we are going to implement the standards of Japan (where) the levels permitted are lower," he explained.

The tougher limits would see caesium-134 and caesium-137 thresholds reduced from 1,250 becquerels per kilogramme at present to 500 becquerels per kilogramme.

The new limit for iodine-131 would be 2,000 becquerels per kilogramme and for strontium-90 it would be 750 becquerels per kilogramme, a spokesman for European consumer affairs commissioner John Dalli told AFP.

"I should like to underline here that all the checks carried out up to now by member states... demonstrate negligible levels of radioactivity which are significantly below current Japanese and European standards," underlined Barroso.

Seafood products make up a significant portion of the EU's relatively small level of imports from Japan, although the EU-27 sources over 99 percent of its seafood imports from other countries.

"We are very concerned about the spread of radioactivity in the sea waters," EU fisheries commissioner Maria Damanaki told members of parliament's fisheries committee on Monday, amid reports of contaminated water entering the sea near the Fukushima plant.

Tokyo Electric Power which runs the plant announced this week that it still needs to pump some 11,500 tonnes of low-level radioactive seawater into the sea because of a lack of storage space.

In a sign of the long-lasting contamination effects, environmental group Greenpeace on Sunday said milk and other staples such as mushrooms and berries are still contaminated in parts of Ukraine, 25 years after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

Roughly a week ago, air monitoring stations in several EU member states announced that "the minutest" levels of radioactive iodine had been detected in the air. Health experts have stressed however that both air and sea pollution levels are too weak to pose a threat to human health.

As well as discussing the ongoing Japanese crisis, MEPs sitting in plenary on Tuesday were also critical of plant decommissioning efforts in Bulgaria, Lithuania and Slovakia.

Delays, lack of coordination and too much money going to unrelated energy projects, were among the criticisms highlighted by MEPs in a resolution.

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