ForbiddTV | What is it like in Fukushima today? Interview with Steve Terada, 2022 Update in the Comment Section @ForbiddTV | Uploaded December 2019 | Updated October 2024, 3 hours ago.
The nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has left the Fukushima Prefecture with a negative lasting impression, but things are not as they were in 2011. Steve Terada actually moved to Fukushima City to investigate how the region has fared since 2011. What he found was negative perceptions which are just not true and set on a quest to show the world what Fukushima is like today.
See the first comment below in the comment section for a 2022 update by Steve Terada.
linkedin.com/in/steve-terada-51273b158
linkedin.com/in/steve-terada-51273b158/detail/recent-activity/documents
Original video can be seen here: youtu.be/jIP60PuTrMU
worldvillage.org/english
youtube.com/watch?v=lLVGMHd95NA&t=178s
Craig,
Happy New Year!
The next three paragraphs is from a follow-up email from Steve Terada. He outlines some information about the black decontamination bag situation.
"The link below gives an overview of status, process, etc. I took a tour of the Interim Storage Facility on August 23 so I'm up to speed on it. As the info at the link below explains, at Dec 12 about 37% of the total of black bags from throughout the prefecture has been moved out of neighborhoods to the ISF. The bags are/were eyesores and reminders of the contamination from the nuclear accident. The ISF straddles the towns of Futaba and Okuma, the same towns that host the Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. The mayor of Futaba explained his decision to host the ISF as explained in the following excerpt from one of my articles published in Hawaii. Some of his townspeople were against it, of course, but he was the one who made the decision so Fukushima Prefecture could move forward in its revitalization.
Futaba Town is co-host of the government’s Interim Storage Facility for Removed Soil and Waste, and Mayor Izawa said that hosting it was an extremely difficult and painful decision. He said accepting the nuclear waste storage site benefitted all of Fukushima because if no town or village agreed to host the site, Fukushima’s revitalization could not proceed. He also expressed a desire to help the many cites that helped his people, but who were burdened with stored contaminated waste.
Fukushima Interim Storage Facility ISF
From Fukushima City where I live I send you two pictures taken at Mt. Shinobu Park (yes the park with the kids playground and radiation measuring device). The one showing black bags stuffed on the site was February 2019 and the second was Sep 19 with most of the bags removed. This is progress. I noted radiation readings of 0.13 microsieverts per hour at the kid's playground despite the proximity to the black storage bag site."
Radiation readings World Maps
CPM and uSv/hr gmcmap.com
uR/hr blackcatsystems.com/RadMap/map.html
CPM radiationnetwork.com
Over 100 million Japan archived readings. jciv.iidj.net/map
Japan and some Korea/China: realtime.safecast.org
realtime.safecast.org/map
Korea: http://iernet.kins.re.kr/
The nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has left the Fukushima Prefecture with a negative lasting impression, but things are not as they were in 2011. Steve Terada actually moved to Fukushima City to investigate how the region has fared since 2011. What he found was negative perceptions which are just not true and set on a quest to show the world what Fukushima is like today.
See the first comment below in the comment section for a 2022 update by Steve Terada.
linkedin.com/in/steve-terada-51273b158
linkedin.com/in/steve-terada-51273b158/detail/recent-activity/documents
Original video can be seen here: youtu.be/jIP60PuTrMU
worldvillage.org/english
youtube.com/watch?v=lLVGMHd95NA&t=178s
Craig,
Happy New Year!
The next three paragraphs is from a follow-up email from Steve Terada. He outlines some information about the black decontamination bag situation.
"The link below gives an overview of status, process, etc. I took a tour of the Interim Storage Facility on August 23 so I'm up to speed on it. As the info at the link below explains, at Dec 12 about 37% of the total of black bags from throughout the prefecture has been moved out of neighborhoods to the ISF. The bags are/were eyesores and reminders of the contamination from the nuclear accident. The ISF straddles the towns of Futaba and Okuma, the same towns that host the Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. The mayor of Futaba explained his decision to host the ISF as explained in the following excerpt from one of my articles published in Hawaii. Some of his townspeople were against it, of course, but he was the one who made the decision so Fukushima Prefecture could move forward in its revitalization.
Futaba Town is co-host of the government’s Interim Storage Facility for Removed Soil and Waste, and Mayor Izawa said that hosting it was an extremely difficult and painful decision. He said accepting the nuclear waste storage site benefitted all of Fukushima because if no town or village agreed to host the site, Fukushima’s revitalization could not proceed. He also expressed a desire to help the many cites that helped his people, but who were burdened with stored contaminated waste.
Fukushima Interim Storage Facility ISF
From Fukushima City where I live I send you two pictures taken at Mt. Shinobu Park (yes the park with the kids playground and radiation measuring device). The one showing black bags stuffed on the site was February 2019 and the second was Sep 19 with most of the bags removed. This is progress. I noted radiation readings of 0.13 microsieverts per hour at the kid's playground despite the proximity to the black storage bag site."
Radiation readings World Maps
CPM and uSv/hr gmcmap.com
uR/hr blackcatsystems.com/RadMap/map.html
CPM radiationnetwork.com
Over 100 million Japan archived readings. jciv.iidj.net/map
Japan and some Korea/China: realtime.safecast.org
realtime.safecast.org/map
Korea: http://iernet.kins.re.kr/