Fukushima Survivors Monitor Radiation, Revive Town
Fifteen years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, residents in Odaka are taking radiation monitoring into their own hands to revive their community. Inn owner Tomoko Kobayashi and others conduct surveys, creating color-coded maps to track levels and share data openly. The crisis began when a tsunami crippled cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, causing meltdowns and contamination. Kobayashis family fled and returned in 2012 to measure radiation levels. Locals test air and produce at hundreds of spots, running a lab next to a disaster-inspired museum. They aim to restore everyday life, but acknowledge rebuilding will take decades amid a shrinking population. At the plant, progress includes enclosing reactor rooftops, deploying micro-drones, and extracting samples. Independent testers like Yukio Shirahige find hotspots in wild game over safety limits and face pressure to downplay risks. Fukushima checks thousands of food samples yearly, lifting most restrictions, while Japan pushes nuclear restarts for energy stability.
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