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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 368.31+0.6%Nov 7 4:00 PM EST

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To: marcher who wrote (195825)2/3/2023 10:07:40 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

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marcher

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Re <<Westerlies ... Easterlies>>

yes, very peculiar, that a single balloon causing so much fuss when (yes, this 2023 is the year of release) a cr@pload of radioactive deadly poison deserved nary a mention, perhaps because done by like-minded coalition of willing member?


I wait to see the ultimate result of experimentation. Of course, given the broken chain of custody, we have no prove that the peach juice and puddle water is not from places far away from Fukushima.







This below was fake-news at the time, perhaps deliberately planted for all we might imagine, but in any case one gets an idea of westerlies and easterlies


bloomberg.com
U.S. Friends Join China in Ripping Japan Plan on Fukushima Water
South Korea, Taiwan also blast move to put water into ocean U.S., IAEA say Japan approach in line with global standards
Japan says it will release more than a million tonnes of water into the sea from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear power plant this year.

bbc.com

Fukushima nuclear disaster: Japan to release radioactive water into sea this year

13 January
EPA
Decommissioning work for the Fukushima power plant will take four decades

Japan says it will release more than a million tonnes of water into the sea from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear power plant this year.

After treatment the levels of most radioactive particles meet the national standard, the operator said.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) says the proposal is safe, but neighbouring countries have voiced concern.

The 2011 Fukushima disaster was the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

Decommissioning has already started but could take four decades.

"We expect the timing of the release would be sometime during this spring or summer," said chief cabinet secretary Hirokazu Matsuno on Friday, adding that the government will wait for a "comprehensive report" from IAEA before the release.

Every day, the plant produces 100 cubic metres of contaminated water, which is a mixture of groundwater, seawater and water used to keep the reactors cool. It is then filtered and stored in tanks.

With more than 1.3 million cubic metres on site, space is running out.

Fukushima fishermen are worried about nuclear water release plan

The water is filtered for most radioactive isotopes, but the level of tritium is above the national standard, operator Tepco said. Experts say tritium is very difficult to remove from water and is only harmful to humans in large doses.

However, neighbouring countries and local fishermen oppose the proposal, which was approved by the Japanese government in 2021.

The Pacific Islands Forum has criticised Japan for the lack of transparency.

"Pacific peoples are coastal peoples, and the ocean continues to be an integral part of their subsistence living," Forum Secretary General Henry Puna told news website Stuff.

"Japan is breaking the commitment that their leaders have arrived at when we held our high level summit in 2021.

"It was agreed that we would have access to all independent scientific and verifiable scientific evidence before this discharge takes place. Unfortunately, Japan has not been co-operating."

What happened at Fukushima 10 years ago?
North-eastern Japan was rocked by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake on 11 March 2011, which then triggered a giant tsunami.

The waves hit the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, flooding three reactors and sparking a major disaster.

Authorities set up an exclusion zone which grew larger and larger as radiation leaked from the plant, forcing more than 150,000 people to evacuate from the area. The zone remains in place.
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