| Now is time to go 
nuclear-free: author
 By Lee I-chia / Staff reporter
 
 Tokyo-based Taiwanese writer Liu Li-erh (劉黎兒) yesterday in Taipei shared her 
latest fact-finding from Japan to say that now is the best time to put a halt to 
nuclear power in Taiwan.
 
 Having lived in Tokyo for 30 years and experienced the devastating earthquake 
and tsunami that struck Japan on March 11 last year and led to the nuclear 
disaster at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, Liu said that more than 1 
million Japanese continue to live in areas with high daily radiation exposure 
and the total cost of damage from the nuclear disaster is still too high to 
estimate.
 
 “If nuclear power is not abolished, then our assets — especially those fixed 
assets in Taipei City and New Taipei City (新北市) — would be ‘abolished’ if a 
nuclear disaster occurs,” Liu told participants at a two-day forum on 
transforming Taiwan into a sustainable low-carbon environment.
 
 Liu said that although her house is located about 80km away from the Fukushima 
Dai-ichi plant, the property has lost almost all of its value due to the high 
levels of radiation present since the disaster.
 
 She said that the Japanese government had set provisional regulations for 
radiation-contaminated food at 500 Bq/kg for radioactive cesium levels 
immediately after the disaster, and reduced the limit to 100 Bq/kg in April. 
However, this is still 1,000 times the limit for rice (0.1 Bq/kg) in force prior 
to the disaster.
 
 The Fukushima Dai-ichi catastrophe proved that sometimes even the government is 
unable to cope with the enormous damage from a nuclear meltdown, she said.
 
 Many Japanese have learned from the disaster that “the knowledge of nuclear 
specialists is limited, they are not experts on evaluating the harm and impact 
that nuclear disasters can cause humans or society,” she said, adding: “So it 
becomes important to make judgements on our own, instead of always believing the 
government.”
 
 Many experts from Japan and other countries are now very concerned about the 
more than 1,500 fuel rods housed in the storage pool inside the damaged No. 4 
reactor building at Fukushima Dai-ichi, warning that a disaster worse than the 
three reactor meltdowns could happen if the pool collapses, she added.
 
 “If the storage pool breaks and runs dry, the nuclear fuel inside will overheat 
and explode, causing a massive radiation release over a wide area,” she said.
 
 Japan’s Mainichi Shimbun on April 2 said that “if this were to happen, residents 
in the Tokyo metropolitan area would be forced to evacuate.”
 
 “Maybe some international experts have not noticed that we have about 8,000 
spent fuel rods stored in the cooling pool at the Guosheng Nuclear Power Plant 
[in Wanli District (萬里), New Taipei City] and a total of about 16,000 throughout 
the country,” she said.
 
 Taiwan has good reason to abandon all nuclear power operations because many 
international experts have already warned that the two nuclear power plants in 
northern Taiwan pose an immediate threat to greater Taipei, she said, adding 
that in February France’s Le Monde newspaper warned about the risk from poor 
management of spent fuel rods at the Guosheng plant.
 
 Taiwan has a high reserve electricity capacity, so there would be no power 
shortage even if the nuclear power plants were immediately closed down, Liu 
said.
 
 Many Japanese companies and government offices have saved up to 50 percent on 
their electricity consumption since the disaster, “so Taiwan can surely do the 
same to end our reliance on nuclear power,” she added.
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