this post was submitted on 30 May 2024
10 points (85.7% liked)

France

2219 readers
63 users here now

La France et les Français

Communautés principales

Nous rejoindre sur Matrix: https://matrix.to/#/#jlai.lu:matrix.org

🔍 Recherche

FAQ, guides et ressources :

Actualité internationale

Loisirs:

Vie Pratique:

Société:

Villes/Régions

Pays:

Humour:

Fedivers:

Règles

  1. Multi-lingual community: posts in other language than French are allowed. 🚀

  2. Tous les francophones sont bienvenus. 🐌

  3. Remember the human : pas d’insultes, pas d’agressivité, pas de harcèlement entre utilisateurs. 🤖

  4. Xénophobie, racisme et autre forme de discrimination sont interdits.🌈

  5. Pas de doublon. Pas de spam. Évitez les paywalls autant que possible.☔

  6. Utilisez la fonction "Report" pour signaler le contenu contrevenant aux règles.🏴

  7. Le contenu doit être en rapport avec la France ou la population française.🇨🇵


Communauté de secours:

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] oce@jlai.lu 2 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (1 children)

Before or after the tsunami ?

It was this week.

Did you used a dosimeter ? Not a geiger an actual dosimeter ?

Yes, we were given dosimeters, I had one for the whole day in the former evacuation zone (20 km radius around the plant) and another for when we stayed in the plant. I actually took notes of the different radiation levels I could see on mine:

  • outside the zone: 0.15 μSv/h
  • on the road to the plant where the radioactive plume passed: 1.3 μSv/h
  • at the security check of the plant: 0.05 μSv/h
  • in front of the sea-side where they mix the treated contaminated water: 1.3 μSv/h
  • on the observatory spot about 60 m away from unit 1: 66 μSv/h

In total, I took 16.3 μSv during the tour (plant + evacuation zone), which is in the range of a dental X-ray.

They are also pretty transparent about it, there are dosimeters everywhere in the zone at train stations and other public places. See the red counter at a station in my pic below:

How much did the nature came back in the aera ?

The region is generally very pretty and natural (rice fields and woods), there's no specific Chernobyl-style nature come back in the evacuation zone. I think it's because the radioactive contamination was way lower, so they could clean up. They have been pressure washing everything and removing 5-10 cm of topsoil for years. Now most of the zone is reopened for people who want to come back. Some of it is still forbidden, you can see the yellow barriers with a crossed silhouette and bags of soil being removed in my pictures below.

[–] Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

1.3 μSv/h

So living full time here would be around 11.3 mSv/year ? Still within the range of a radiation worker, and still less than the background radiation in Kerala, Interesting

[–] oce@jlai.lu 3 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Less than that, 1.3 was a very specific place on the road to the plant where you probably cannot live. In the rest of the reopened zone it was more like 0.05–0.2. I am pretty convinced it's safe, radiation-wise, to live in the reopened parts of the evacuation zone.