Attack of the Nuclear Apologists
By HELEN CALDICOTTApril 12, 2011
Soon after the   Fukushima accident last month, I stated publicly that a nuclear event of   this size and catastrophic potential could present a medical problem  of  very large dimensions. Events have proven this observation to be  true  despite the nuclear industry's campaign about the "minimal" health   effects of so-called low-level radiation. That billions of its dollars   are at stake if the Fukushima event causes the "nuclear renaissance"  to  slow down appears to be evident from the industry's attacks on its   critics, even in the face of an unresolved and escalating disaster at   the reactor complex at Fukushima.
Proponents of nuclear power – including George   Monbiot, who has had a mysterious road-to-Damascus conversion to its   supposedly benign effects – accuse me and others who call attention to   the potential serious medical consequences of the accident of   "cherry-picking" data and overstating the health effects of radiation   from the radioactive fuel in the destroyed reactors and their cooling   pools. Yet by reassuring the public that things aren't too bad, Monbiot   and others at best misinform, and at worst misrepresent or distort, the   scientific evidence of the harmful effects of radiation exposure – and   they play a predictable shoot-the-messenger game in the process.
To wit:
1) Mr Monbiot, who is a journalist not a scientist, appears unaware of the difference between external and internal radiation
Let me educate him.
The former is what populations were exposed to  when  the atomic bombs were detonated over Hiroshima and Nagasaki in  1945;  their profound and on-going medical effects are well documented.  [1]
Internal radiation, on the other hand,  emanates from  radioactive elements which enter the body by inhalation,  ingestion, or  skin absorption. Hazardous radionuclides such as  iodine-131, caesium  137, and other isotopes currently being released in  the sea and air  around Fukushima bio-concentrate at each step of  various food chains  (for example into algae, crustaceans, small fish,  bigger fish, then  humans; or soil, grass, cow's meat and milk, then  humans). [2] 
After  they enter the body, these elements –  called internal emitters – migrate  to specific organs such as the  thyroid, liver, bone, and brain, where  they continuously irradiate  small volumes of cells with high doses of  alpha, beta and/or gamma  radiation, and over many years, can induce  uncontrolled cell  replication – that is, cancer. Further, many of the  nuclides remain  radioactive in the environment for generations, and  ultimately will  cause increased incidences of cancer and genetic  diseases over time.
The grave effects of internal emitters are of  the  most profound concern at Fukushima. It is inaccurate and misleading  to  use the term "acceptable levels of external radiation" in assessing   internal radiation exposures. To do so, as Monbiot has done, is to   propagate inaccuracies and to mislead the public worldwide (not to   mention other journalists) who are seeking the truth about radiation's   hazards.
2) Nuclear industry proponents often assert  that low  doses of radiation (eg below 100mSV) produce no ill effects  and are  therefore safe. But , as the US National Academy of Sciences  BEIR VII  report has concluded, no dose of radiation is safe, however  small,  including background radiation; exposure is cumulative and adds  to an  individual's risk of developing cancer.
3) Now let's turn to Chernobyl. Various  seemingly  reputable groups have issued differing reports on the  morbidity and  mortalities resulting from the 1986 radiation  catastrophe. The World  Health Organisation (WHO) in 2005 issued a  report attributing only 43  human deaths directly to the Chernobyl  disaster and estimating an  additional 4,000 fatal cancers. In contrast,  the 2009 report,  "Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for  People and the  Environment", published by the New York Academy of  Sciences, comes to a  very different conclusion. The three scientist  authors – Alexey V  Yablokov, Vassily B. Nesterenko, and Alexey V  Nesterenko – provide in  its pages a translated synthesis and  compilation of hundreds of  scientific articles on the effects of the  Chernobyl disaster that have  appeared in Slavic language publications  over the past 20 years. They  estimate the number of deaths attributable  to the Chernobyl meltdown at  about 980,000.
Monbiot dismisses the report as worthless, but  to do  so – to ignore and denigrate an entire body of literature,  collectively  hundreds of studies that provide evidence of large and  significant  impacts on human health and the environment – is arrogant  and  irresponsible. Scientists can and should argue over such things,  for  example, as confidence intervals around individual estimates (which   signal the reliability of estimates), but to consign out of hand the   entire report into a metaphorical dustbin is shameful.
Further, as Prof Dimitro Godzinsky, of the  Ukranian  National Academy of Sciences, states in his introduction to  the report:  "Against this background of such persuasive data some  defenders of  atomic energy look specious as they deny the obvious  negative effects of  radiation upon populations. In fact, their  reactions include almost  complete refusal to fund medical and  biological studies, even  liquidating government bodies that were in  charge of the 'affairs of  Chernobyl'. Under pressure from the nuclear  lobby, officials have also  diverted scientific personnel away from  studying the problems caused by  Chernobyl."
4) Monbiot expresses surprise that a  UN-affiliated  body such as WHO might be under the influence of the  nuclear power  industry, causing its reporting on nuclear power matters  to be biased.  And yet that is precisely the case.
In the early days of nuclear power, WHO issued   forthright statements on radiation risks such as its 1956 warning:   "Genetic heritage is the most precious property for human beings. It   determines the lives of our progeny, health and harmonious development   of future generations. As experts, we affirm that the health of future   generations is threatened by increasing development of the atomic   industry and sources of radiation … We also believe that new mutations   that occur in humans are harmful to them and their offspring."
After 1959, WHO made no more statements on  health  and radioactivity. What happened? On 28 May 1959, at the 12th  World  Health Assembly, WHO drew up an agreement with the International  Atomic  Energy Agency (IAEA); clause 12.40 of this agreement says:  "Whenever  either organisation [the WHO or the IAEA] proposes to  initiate a  programme or activity on a subject in which the other  organisation has  or may have a substantial interest, the first party  shall consult the  other with a view to adjusting the matter by mutual  agreement." In other  words, the WHO grants the right of prior approval  over any research it  might undertake or report on to the IAEA – a group  that many people,  including journalists, think is a neutral watchdog,  but which is, in  fact, an advocate for the nuclear power industry. The  IAEA's founding  papers state: "The agency shall seek to accelerate and  enlarge the  contribution of atomic energy to peace, health and  prosperity through  the world."
Monbiot appears ignorant about the WHO's  subjugation  to the IAEA, yet this is widely known within the scientific  radiation  community. But it is clearly not the only matter on which he  is ignorant  after his apparent three-day perusal of the vast body of  scientific  information on radiation and radioactivity. As we have seen,  he and  other nuclear industry apologists sow confusion about radiation  risks,  and, in my view, in much the same way that the tobacco industry  did in  previous decades about the risks of smoking. Despite their  claims, it is  they, not the "anti-nuclear movement" who are "misleading  the world  about the impacts of radiation on human health."
Helen Caldicott is president of the Helen Caldicott Foundation for a Nuclear-Free Planet and the author of Nuclear Power is Not the Answer
[1]  See, for example, WJ Schull, Effects of Atomic  Radiation: A  Half-Century of Studies from Hiroshima and Nagasaki (New  York:  Wiley-Lis, 1995) and DE Thompson, K Mabuchi, E Ron, M Soda, M  Tokunaga,  S Ochikubo, S Sugimoto, T Ikeda, M Terasaki, S Izumi et al.  "Cancer  incidence in atomic bomb survivors, Part I: Solid tumors,  1958-1987" in  Radiat Res 137:S17-S67 (1994).
[2] This  process is called bioaccumulation and comes  in two subtypes as well,  bioconcentration and biomagnification. For  more information see: J.U.  Clark and V.A. McFarland, Assessing  Bioaccumulation in Aquatic  Organisms Exposed to Contaminated Sediments,  Miscellaneous Paper D-91-2  (1991), Environmental Laboratory, Waterways  Experiment Station,  Vicksburg, MS and H.A. Vanderplog, D.C. Parzyck,  W.H. Wilcox, J.R.  Kercher, and S.V. Kaye, Bioaccumulation Factors for  Radionuclides in  Freshwater Biota, ORNL-5002 (1975), Environmental  Sciences Division  Publication, Number 783, Oak Ridge National  Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN.
 
 
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