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For
the first time since the 2011 disaster, all of the rice harvested in Fukushima
Prefecture this year has passed radiation tests and now can be deemed safe for
consumption, according to local officials.
Virtually all of the rice harvested in
Fukushima in 2014 – or some 360,000 tonnes – has been checked for radiation and
met the national standards of less than 100 Becquerel’s per kilogram, Reuters
reports.
"The
fact that the amount of rice that does not pass our checks has steadily reduced
in the last three years indicates that we're taking the right steps,"
said Fukushima official Tsuneaki Oonam, who heads the department that oversees
Fukushima rice farming.
Authorities
began testing all rice grown in Fukushima prefecture in 2012, although the
amounts harvested over the past years were insignificant. More 190 testing
devices are used throughout the prefecture to ensure rice’s safety standards.
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For
the last 2 years, some 10 million bags of rice were checked annually. In 2012,
71 bags were found to exceed the safety standards, while in 2013, 28 bags were
over the standard, the Asahi Shimbun reports.
Rice farmers, according to the
newspaper, succeeded in changing the fertilizer used so that radioactive cesium
is not absorbed by the rice plant.
Rice
that passes the Food Sanitation Law standards, is labeled as such. Those bags
with radiation readings are destroyed. Despite the promise of getting a clean
over-all reading, Fukushima prefecture plans to continue the radiation testing
program.
Japan exported its first
rice following the disaster last August – a 300-kilogram batch was delivered to
Singapore. Fruit exports to Malaysia also resumed last year, according to
officials, while in 2012 Fukushima peaches and apples were exported to Thailand.
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