Elevated B.C. radiation levels considered no threat to health

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From the Globe & Mail – March 29, 2011

by Mark Hume

Increased levels of radioactive iodine have been detected in seaweed
and rainwater samples in British Columbia and a scientist from Simon
Fraser University says the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor in Japan is
clearly the source.

Krzysztof (Kris) Starosta, an associate
professor in the department of chemistry at SFU, said levels of the
radioisotope iodine-131 have risen, but are not a health concern.

Perry Kendall, British Columbia’s provincial health officer,
reinforced that view, saying the levels detected by SFU are “minuscule …
very, very tiny,” and are nothing to worry about.

He said the levels are “about one-millionth” the dose that would be of concern.

“We’re looking at very low levels of radiation here,” Dr. Kendall said.

Dr.
Starosta agreed the levels are low, but he said they did climb over
several days of testing as Japanese nuclear workers struggled to bring
the damaged reactor under control.

“As of now, the levels we’re
seeing are not harmful to humans,” Dr. Starosta said. “We have not
reached levels of elevated risk.”

He said the radiation is being
carried across the Pacific to North America by the jet stream, strong
wind currents that blow west to east high in the atmosphere. While most
of the radioactivity falls out over the ocean, some of it has reached
the West Coast where it is being deposited with rain. It is mixing with
seawater and accumulating in seaweed.

The rainwater samples
containing iodine-131 were taken at SFU’s campus on Burnaby Mountain and
in downtown Vancouver. Seaweed samples were collected in North
Vancouver near the Seabus terminal.

Samples taken March 16 and
March 18 did not show the signature for iodine-131, but it did show up
in tests on March, 19, 20 and 25.

The radioactive substance is
measured in “decays of iodine-131 per second per litre of rainwater,”
which is expressed as becquerels or Bq/l.

On March 18, the level
was zero, but on March 19 it was 9 Bq/l and on March 20 it was 12 Bq/l.
On March 25 the level was 11 Bq/l.

In Japan, a health warning was
issued recently when iodine-131 levels reached 210 Bq/l in drinking
water. The Japanese standard for iodine-131 in drinking water is 100
Bq/l if the water is to be consumed by an infant, and 300 Bq/l if the
water is to be consumed by an adult.

“The only possible source of
iodine-131 in the atmosphere is a release from a nuclear fission,” Dr.
Starosta said. “Iodine-131 has a half-life of eight days, thus we
conclude the only possible release which could happen is from the
Fukushima incident.”

He said iodine-131 will probably continue to
show up in B.C. for three to four weeks after the Fukushima nuclear
reactor stops releasing radioactivity into the atmosphere.

Iodine-131
has been detected in rainwater at several locations in the United
States in the past few days, but far below levels that would raise
health concerns.

Dr. Kendall said health authorities will continue
to monitor the situation, but it appears the fight to control the
damaged reactor in Japan is being won, and even a worst-case scenario
wouldn’t threaten Canada.

“My sense is that it’s coming under
control. The amounts of radiation that were being emitted last week are
probably not going to be measured again, unless something absolutely
disastrous happens,” he said. “Health Canada and the [Radiation]
Protection Branch … have modelled with the U.S. other scenarios. They
modelled one where a couple of the nuclear reactor cores melted down and
three of the spent fuel-rod containments melted down – and even then we
are at such a distance away, and there is such a volumetric dispersion,
that we’re not going to see levels of harm.”

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.