This is the second time this week that there have been a large number of dead fish off the coast of Japan, fishing boats have struggled to move an inch on the sea, and the beaches and water have turned silvery white
Since August this year, Nagasaki, Kumamoto and other places in Japan have been continuously flooded by ** fishing ports and dead fish on the beach, according to China.com, after this situation, the dead fish on the sea have been **85 tons!That's all!There are official estimates that these dead fish even reach thousands of tons.
What the hell is going on?Japan** defended that "the fish may die from lack of oxygen, or because the big fish are chasing after it, and it has nothing to do with the nuclear wastewater." Netizens all over the world are scolding, ** local residents went to the beach to pick up fish and go home, wanting to prove their safety, but ** quickly sent a notice, don't eat it!Can't eat it!People ask why?They couldn't say why, they just said that it wasn't nuclear-contaminated water anyway. It's kind of hilarious.
And even more outrageous?Not only Japan, but also many other countries cannot escape responsibility: in May this year, a nuclear power plant in Minnesota, USA, leaked 400,000 gallons of radioactive wastewater, and the situation was delayed for up to four months before it was made public.
Not long ago, the Sellafield nuclear power plant in the United Kingdom was also exposed to a possible leak comparable to "Chernobyl", which lasted for 3 years and is still ongoing, but it has been concealed and covered up.
What will be the impact?In any case, the presence of schools of dead fish so frequently in a short period of time is partly a sign that the marine ecosystem has changed.
Whether these countries admit it or not, nuclear-contaminated water is inevitable for the environment. It is important to know that the radioactivity level of nuclear-contaminated water after dilution is still thousands of times higher than the natural state of seawater, and long-term exposure to the radioactive environment will cause cancer, deformity and other diseases in marine organisms.
So, who will bear the bitter fruit?That's going to be every one of us.