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| There is no safe level of radiation |
The Daily Mail reports that Radiation released from the Cumbrian Nuclear Plant have been found 80 miles away across the border.
Traces of radiation were found in fruit, potatoes and vegetables near to
Dounreay nuclear power station in Caithness, in the far north-east of
Scotland
Nuclear
waste released from the Cumbrian reprocessing site has made
fish and
shellfish caught off the Dumfriesshire coast slightly radioactive.
And fish-fans in Dumfriesshire have the highest exposure to nuclear radiation of anyone north of the Border.
Despite
Sellafield nuclear station being situated 80 miles away, the new report
reveals that the nuclear power station is still having an impact on
Scotland.
And although the levels are within safe EU limits, Sellafield and
Scottish nuclear power stations have infiltrated the food chain here.
Dr Richard Dixon, director of Friends of the
Earth Scotland, said: "There is no safe level of radiation. Nuclear
technology... poses an ongoing threat to public health."
Traces
of radiation were found in fruit, potatoes and vegetables near to
Dounreay nuclear power station in Caithness, in the far north-east of
Scotland.
Whilst in Chapelcross, in Dumfriesshire, nuclear radiation has made its way into the milk.
Where
as at Faslane, near Helensburgh, Dunbartonshire, the destination of
Britain's nuclear submarines where liquid radioactive waste is
discharged into the Gareloch, beef has been revealed to contain a small amount of radiation.
The Radioactivity in Food and the Environment (RIFE) report by the
Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa)- the Environment Agency
and the Food Standards Agency (FSA) - has revealed the true extent of
radiation exposure in the new report.
A spokesman for the FSA in Scotland said: "There are low levels of radiation present naturally in the environment.
"Then
there are nuclear sites which discharge material as an aerial discharge
into the air or liquid discharge into the sea. The discharge from the
sea is more likely to affect fish and aerial discharge will get into the
land.
"These are, however, very small levels of no concern to anybody."
The
findings also reveal the type of person likely to have been exposed to
the highest dose of radioactivity in 2013 and showed that in Scotland,
those susceptible to the highest dose would be an adult eating fish
caught off Dumfriesshire.
They would have consumed 0.44
MILLISIEVERTs - around 4 per cent of the EU safe limit, whilst close to
Dounreay adults who consume green vegetables will get the most
radiation.
The unborn children of pregnant women living within
550 yards of the Hunterston B site, in North Ayrshire - one of
Scotland's two working nuclear power stations -would received the
highest dose there.
Dr Richard Dixon, director of Friends of the
Earth Scotland, said:
"There is no safe level of radiation. Nuclear
technology... poses an ongoing threat to public health."
A
spokesman for Dounreay Site Restoration said: "The levels of
radioactivity found in the vicinity of Dounreay are within the limits
laid down in law."
A Scottish Government spokesman said: "There
are stringent regulatory regimes in place for protecting the public and
the environment from radiation."
The 2014 RIFE Report show
doses received by members of the public living near sites, and across
Scotland, were well within legal dose limits."
It should be made clear that after Fukushima the EU and US raised the maximum legal radiation dose limit.
From
http://www.activistpost.com/2011/04/eu-follows-epa-raises-acceptable.html
In the US according to
PEER (Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, the
new standards
would result in a
“nearly 1000-fold increase for exposure to
strontium-90, a 3000 to 100,000-fold hike for exposure to iodine-131;
and an almost
25,000 rise for exposure to radioactive nickel-63” in
drinking water.
EU ordinance 297/2011 raises the Maximum Levels of radiation and radioactive isotopes for food and feed to rather serious levels. In some cases, such as the case of Cesium-134 and Cesium-137, the levels are
actually twice the amount of previously acceptable levels. Many of these increases are allowed in products such as infant formula and baby foods.It should be noted that so far the new
EU changes only apply to food imported from Japan. The justification behind this is that in the event of a nuclear emergency the traditional levels of acceptable radiation should be ignored so as not to cause a food shortage as a result of legal constraints.