ASR Limited is a small team of environmental scientists, engineers and consultants, working out of New Zealand, Jakarta and Venice, California:
ASR’s core philosophy is to understand, innovate, and sustain. Our first step is to understand the natural processes governing a specific project site. After spending time developing an understanding of a system’s natural design and function, we implement an innovative and sustainable solution for the project. This approach is always the same whether the challenge is coastal management, fluid transport, fisheries, engineering, or environmental impacts. We work with the world’s top governments, corporations, and organizations to develop innovative solutions for complex issues around the globe.
ASR’s thorough understanding of marine systems, science, and technology enables us to consider environmental and human health in everything we do. We are one of the few companies in the world developing innovative solutions that work in concert with the natural world, rather than against it. By developing technology inspired by nature, we strive to implement solutions that will satisfy the needs of all stakeholders, including our planet.
One of their recent projects has been to hypothetically model the expanding plume of radioactive seawater that has resulted from the escape of water used to mitigate the meltdowns at the four Fukushima power plants:
We use a Lagrangian particles dispersal method to track where free floating material (fish larvae, algae, phytoplankton, zooplankton…) present in the sea water near the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station plant could have gone since the earthquake on March 11th. THIS IS NOT A REPRESENTATION OF THE RADIOACTIVE PLUME CONCENTRATION.
Since we do not know how much contaminated water and at what concentration was released into the ocean, it is impossible to estimate the extent and dilution of the plume. However, field monitoring by TEPCO and modeling by the Sirrocco group in University of Toulouse, France both show high concentration in the surrounding water (highest rate at 80 Bq/L and 24 Bq/L for respectively I-131 and C-137) . Assuming that a part of the passive biomass could have been contaminated in the area, we are trying to track where the radionuclides are spreading as it will eventually climb up the food chain.
The dispersal model is ASR’s Pol3DD. The model is forced by hydrodynamic data from the HYCOM/NCODA system which provides on a weekly basis, daily oceanic current in the world ocean. The resolution in this part of the Pacific Ocean is around 8km x 8km cells. We are treating only the sea surface currents. Particles in the model are continuously released near the Fukushima Daiichi power plant since March 11th.
The dispersal model keeps a trace of their visits in the model cells. The results here are expressed in number of visit per surface area of material which has been in contact at least once with the highly concentrated radioactive water.
Here is the youtube they have published that visualizes the model, from the entry of radioactive elements into the water in March 2011, up through November 11, 2011:
It isn’t clear from ASR’s published material whether or not this model is influenced by the continuing entry of radioactive water into the ocean. It is fairly certain that Tepco and other monitoring agencies do not have anything that could be described as a clear idea as to how much radioactive water has gotten into circulation in the North Pacific, or how much water is continuing to make its way there:
On 21 April, TEPCO estimated that 520 tons radioactive water leaked into the sea before leaks in a pit in unit 2 were plugged, releasing 4,700 TBq of total water release (calculated by simple sum, which is inconsistent with the IAEA methodology for mixed nuclide releases) (20,000 times facility’s annual limit). TEPCO’s detailed estimates were 2,800 TBq of I-131, 940 TBq of Cs-134, 940 TBq of Cs-137.
Another 300,000 tons of relatively less radioactive water had already been reported to have leaked or purposefully pumped into the sea to free room for storage of highly radioactively contaminated water. TEPCO had attempted to contain contaminated water in the harbor near the plant by installing “curtains” to prevent outflow, but now believes this effort was unsuccessful.
According to a report published in October 2011 by the French Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety, between 21 March and mid-July around 2.7 × 1016 Bq of caesium-137 (about 8.4 kg) entered the ocean, about 82 percent having flowed into the sea before 8 April. This emission of radioactivity into the sea represents the most important individual emission of artificial radioactivity into the sea ever observed. However, the Fukushima coast has one of the world’s strongest currents and these transported the contaminated waters far into the Pacific Ocean, thus causing a high dispersion of the radioactive elements. The results of measurements of both the seawater and the coastal sediments lead to suppose that the consequences of the accident, for what concerns radioactivity, will be minor for marine life as of autumn 2011 (weak concentration of radioactivity in the water and limited accumulation in sediments).
On the other hand, significant pollution of sea water along the coast near the nuclear plan might persist, because of the continuing arrival of radioactive material transported towards the sea by surface water running over contaminated soil. Further, some coastal areas might have less favorable dilution or sedimentation characteristics than those observed so far. Finally, the possible presence of other persistent radioactive substances, such as strontium-90 or plutonium, has not been sufficiently studied. Recent measurements show persistent contamination of some marine species (mostly fish) caught along the coast of Fukushima district. Organisms that filter water and fish at the top of the food chain are, over time, the most sensitive to caesium pollution. It is thus justified to maintain surveillance of marine life that is fished in the coastal waters off Fukushima.
The last sentence is quite an understatement.




13 Comments

ET –
Got any info or links to organizations that are monitoring the airborne fallout from Fukishima on the mainland US (Alaska and the western states)?
This came out in June of last year.
The mortality rate among infants in the US rose 35% after Fukushima.
Mary Mac –
I was hoping for something more recent, but thanks anyway.
Reliable information has been hard to come by all along – since the disasters. But ANY information is not easy to come by. I’ve been looking for a page that compiles all global studies and online resources, but haven’t been able to find one.
Thanks. That explains/confirms my problem/suspicion: went a-googling and couldn’t find anything more recent that late last summer. Have a vague recollection of a story way back about the government shutting down or refusing to release info from gov’t operated radiation measuring sites on the west coast. (That might include pressuring universities that get federal funding grants to also withhold data.)
Wonder if NukeFree.org might have something?
tweeted and recommended with thanks et
Thanks. Maybe the headline of my diary should have also included Hawaii. Looking for readings or monitoring from Wake Island or Midway Island, I find none on the web.
… and you won’t. It would embarrass our owners.
As far as the branch of the <1% that runs Japan is concerned the Fukushima catastrophe is now ancient history and any person expressing any concerns about the rapidly spreading radiation from the 3 still-unlocated, still-unmonitored core melts is just spreading "baseless rumors…"
… "baseless rumors" being both the new Japanese word for radiation and the current Japanese media's equivalent of what are referred to in the U.S. as "terrorist sympathizers."
Case in point: as the criminally insane efforts to spread the disaster debris as far and wide as possible – in order to dilute the radiation readings – continue the farmers in Fukushima are being ordered to till their contaminated croplands under as part of the tragically farcical “national decontamination program”.
The honest farmers – the ones who did not plant last year and thus did not sell the radioactive results to feed schoolchildren – the honest ones know that turning over the ground will embed the radionuclides deep in the soil, leading to further crop and groundwater contamination.
These farmers, and there are many of them, know that this is a hideous thing to do to the land and those who depend on their crops but they’ve been ordered to do it by the governing puppets of the <1%… and they've been told that if they don't do it they will have their land declared as "abandoned."
And our masters have ordered the puppets who govern the U.S. to aid and abet this ongoing atrocity however they can.
The global <1%… working hard for you every day in every way.
… btw the temperature at the bottom of Fukushima daiichi #2 is rising yet again as of this comment… but don’t worry… it’s in a state of cold shutdown!
Dayam, ET…! That vast plume will hit the Isles at the same time as it hits the Aleutians…! 8-(
We can’t get updated numbers on infant mortality stats and what states they happened in???
WTF!
Thanks ET, tweeted and recommended.
Right after the tsumani hit, FDL’s Masoninblue had the best solution: excavate underneath, install a lead lining and way to get radioactive material out. It’s the identical kind of technology we used to tunnel under NYC to build the subway system. The construction costs would have been enormous, but they still would have been less than the damage done to Japan’s fresh water supply and Pacific fisheries.
Thanks ET
In general, here’s a mapping resource for airborne fallout: safecast.org.
I met a couple with a 4 year old this weekend who decided to leave their house and land and lives to protect their child. They are still in shock. They left within two hours of receiving news from a nuclear engineer that a meltdown was likely. All they took were the clothes on their backs and one change of clothing. At first they spent 3 weeks in western Japan and then decided to flee the country. They left Japan in April 2011 and moved to Austin.
He showed me the mapping website when I was asking questions about the Hokkaido region of Japan to the north of Fukushima. Some of the food I am used to buying comes from that region.
I haven’t explored the website enough to understand the readings, but his doing some calculations on the Hokkaido readings convinced me that my uneasiness about continuing to buy foods made in that region is well warranted.
They have decided to invest their time in helping others leave Japan if they choose to and in joining the movement to discontinue the use of nuclear power. Before Fukushima they really had no interest in or knowledge about nuclear power.