"Black Plastic Bags with Red Cone" by Mary Lou Dauray Pen and Ink 5 ¾ x 4 3/4
In the Japanese Fukushima Prefecture you cannot help
but glance around and see at least 54,000 very organized stacks holding more than
9 million neatly packed plastic storage bags.
These enormous black sealed bags are filled with radioactive soil and
all kinds of sizzling waste collected since the Fukushima Daiishi triple
nuclear meltdown on March 11, 2011. All this waste is stuffed into these
monstrous bags that have a predicted life of only 3 years. The filled bags are then
deposited throughout the areas surrounding Fukushima including even in the
backyards of homes, parking lots and parks.
Since 2009 I had been
creating artwork reflecting my concern about man-made climate destruction. I did series of paintings about plastic
pollution in the oceans; the melting of glacial ice; and the mining,
transporting and burning of coal. I felt that after the December Paris Climate
agreement, I wanted to focus my work on another environmental problem—the continuing
future development of nuclear power plants by international corporate
interests. The argument they use is that
nuclear power should be considered a strong contender for alternative energy
sources—one that will reduce greenhouse gases in the environment.
During these
last months I have done quite a bit of research about nuclear energy. It was shocking to learn about the very
serious ongoing radioactive emissions from the Fukushima Daiichi power plant
accident in 2011. Thyroid cancers are
already appearing in the children; radioactive water is being pumped into the
ocean at an alarming rate. TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) is finally
starting to come clean about the severity of the Fukushima disaster in other
respects as well. A new declassified report from the US Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, written about a week after the disaster occurred, revealed that 100
percent of the total nuclear fuel spent at reactor number four was released
into the atmosphere. According to nuclear expert Arnie Gundersen, of
fairwinds.org, “unit four harbored more cesium than in all 800 nuclear bombs
exploded above ground”.
Approximately
20,000 workers are being employed to thoroughly cleanse the radioactive soil,
streets, and gutters. Workers go house
by house to scrub rooftops and walls by hand—some even using a toothbrush. In short, these decontamination efforts are not
getting "rid" of the radioactive problem – they are simply moving it,
and sometimes not very far. The ultimate
cost of this cleanup campaign is estimated to possibly be as high as 2 billion
US dollars.
Nuclear
waste disposal really has no solution. I
am planning to continue my research and related artwork about this topic. Please
stay posted.
www.maryloudauray.com
It's a serious problem.In my nuclear biological warfare training we were taught to wash it down with a firehouse. Of course you are right it just goes somewhere else. The same is true with filling in wetlands which I have written about quite a bit; the water just goes else where. The reason we have such huge floods is simple; the wetlands have been filled in so the water can only go up.
ReplyDeleteThank you, David, for your comment. I am going to try to learn as much as possible about the situation in present-day Fukushima. The filled storage bags have to go somewhere....and in reality there is no real place to go to for the disposal of radioactive waste.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.fukushimawatch.com/2016-01-21-what-has-the-u-s-government-been-hiding-about-the-fukushima-nuclear-disaster.html
ReplyDeleteHere, in our little town in Rhode Island, we are presently faced with yet another company wanting to expand our gas. Rumor has it is that it is a "done" deal. Claims that Governor Gina Raimondo will push forward with the project without giving a choice has distressed so many. Tiny Burrillville has previously been subject to so much corruption, including its being placed on the map for gasoline and its additive MTBE being in his public water supply, sickening so many people. There are streets in the neighborhood where every single household has been struck by some form of cancer and other respiratory illnesses. Anyway, keep up the good work. It will help so many of us bring these issues to the forefront. There are just SOOO Many ISSUES!!! http://rhodeislandbase.weebly.com/faqs.html
ReplyDeleteHello Roger: Please let me know more about what you are mentioning. It sounds like another mini Flint situation. I am going to check out your website. Thank you for your encouragement.
DeleteRoger: I just checked out the situation in Burriville..and the situation sounds terrible. One of the big stockholders in the gas company is Duke Energy...I am so sorry about the water. I did not mean to imply a lesser situation than Flint. All polluted water is horrific and the companies that contribute to this need to be stopped.
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