Evacuation Immediate response , February 2012 orders, and additional administrative districts that had an evacuation order are highlighted. However, due to difficulty coordinating with the national government, a 3 km evacuation order of ~6,000 residents and a 10 km
shelter-in-place order for 45,000 residents was established nearly simultaneously at 21:23. The evacuation radius was expanded to 10 km at 5:44, and was then revised to 20 km at 18:25. The size of these evacuation zones was set for arbitrary reasons at the discretion of bureaucrats rather than nuclear experts. Communication between different authorities was scattered and at several times the local governments learned the status of evacuation via the televised news media. at the time of the 3 km evacuation order, the majority of residents within the zone had already evacuated. Additionally, a 30 km shelter in place order was communicated on the 15th, although some municipalities within this zone had already decided to evacuate their residents. This order was followed by a voluntary evacuation recommendation on the 25th, although the majority of residents had evacuated from the 30 km zone by then. 51 fatalities are attributed to the evacuation. However
Geraldine Thomas claimed "there is a vanishingly small chance that this man's lung cancer was as a result of the radiation he was exposed to".
Communication failures The Japanese public felt that the government and TEPCO provided limited information about the accident in the early weeks. There were several instances early in the accident response in which data about the accident was not properly handled. The
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) only sent data from the
SPEEDI network to the Fukushima prefectural government TEPCO officials were instructed not to use the phrase "core meltdown" in order to conceal the meltdown until they officially recognized it two months after the accident. The Japanese government did not keep records of key meetings during the crisis. In January 2015, the number of residents displaced due to the accident was around 119,000, peaking at 164,000 in June 2012. A 2014 metareview of 48 articles indexed by
PubMed,
PsycINFO, and
EMBASE, highlighted several psychophysical consequences among the residents in
Miyagi,
Iwate,
Ibaraki,
Tochigi and
Tokyo. The metareview found mass fear among Fukushima residents which was associated with
depressive symptoms,
anxiety,
sleep disturbance,
post-traumatic stress disorder, maternal distress, and distress among the employees of the nuclear plant. The rates of psychological distress among evacuated people rose fivefold compared to the Japanese average due to the experience of the accident and evacuation. An increase in childhood obesity in the area after the accident has also been attributed to recommendations that children stay indoors instead of going outside to play.
Energy policy complex in Tokyo Prior to the accident, over 25% of domestic electricity generation in Japan used nuclear power and Japan had set a fairly ambitious green house gas (GHG) reduction target of 25% below 1990 levels by 2020, which involved increasing the share of nuclear power in electricity generation from 30% to 50%. However, this plan was abandoned and the target was revised to a 5.2% emissions increase by 2020 following the accident, alongside a focus on reducing dependence on nuclear power in favor of improved thermal efficiency in fossil fuel energy use and increasing the share of "renewables". The contribution of nuclear energy dropped to less than one percent following the accident This resulted in an increase in the share of fossil fuel energy use, which had increased to ~94% by 2015 (the highest of any IEA member state, with the remaining ~6% produced by renewables, an increase from 4% in 2010). As of 2013, TEPCO and eight other Japanese power companies were paying approximately 3.6 trillion
JPY (37 billion
USD) more in combined imported fossil fuel costs compared to 2010 to make up for the missing power. In May 2011, UK chief inspector of nuclear installations Mike Weightman traveled to Japan as the lead of an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) expert mission. The main finding of this mission, as reported to the IAEA ministerial conference that month, was that risks associated with tsunamis in several sites in Japan had been underestimated. In September 2011, IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said the Japanese nuclear disaster "caused deep public anxiety throughout the world and damaged confidence in nuclear power". In the aftermath,
Germany accelerated plans to close its nuclear power reactors and decided to phase out the rest by 2022. but have undone these plans since. Italy held a national referendum, in which 94 percent voted against the government's plan to build new nuclear power plants. New nuclear projects were proceeding in some countries. The consulting firm KPMG reported in 2018 that 653 new nuclear facilities were planned or proposed for completion by 2030. In 2019, the United Kingdom was planning a major nuclear expansion despite some public objection. Russia had similar plans. In 2015, India was also pressing ahead with a large nuclear program, as was South Korea. Indian Vice President M. Hamid Ansari said in 2012 that "nuclear energy is the only option" for expanding India's energy supplies, and Prime Minister Modi announced in 2014 that India intended to build 10 more nuclear reactors in a collaboration with Russia.
Radiation effects in humans , from 21 March until 5 May 2011 Radiation exposure of those living in proximity to the accident site was estimated at 12–25
millisieverts (mSv) in the year following the accident. Residents of Fukushima City were estimated to have received 4 mSv in the same time period. In comparison, the dosage of
background radiation received over a lifetime is 170 mSv. Very few or no detectable cancers are expected as a result of accumulated radiation exposure. Residents who were evacuated were exposed to so little radiation that radiation-induced health effects were likely to be below detectable levels. The
World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations (UN), and researchers from other groups were particularly concerned about
thyroid cancer as a result of the radiation. In January 2022, six such patients who were kids at the time of the accident sued TEPCO for 616 million yen after developing thyroid cancer. The scientific consensus suggests that the increase in detectable thyroid cancer fell within statistical background noise due to the screening effect, and that the cancers did not have chromosomal aberrations consistent with exposure to
ionizing radiation, except for that caused by
CT scans.
Leukemia,
breast cancer, and other
solid cancers were studied by the WHO. Increase in lifetime cancer relative to baseline risk for infants was reported because these represent an upper bound for the cancer related health risks. especially when the effects of radiation on the human body are not linear, and with obvious thresholds. The WHO reports that the radiation levels from the accident were below the thresholds for deterministic effects from radiation. Migratory
pelagic species are also highly effective and rapid transporters of pollutants throughout the ocean. Elevated levels of Cs-134 appeared in migratory species off the coast of California that were not seen prior to the accident. In June 2016, the
political advocacy group
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, asserted that 174,000 people have been unable to return to their homes and ecological diversity has decreased and malformations have been found in trees, birds, and mammals. Although physiological abnormalities have been reported within the vicinity of the accident zone, the scientific community has largely rejected any such findings of genetic or mutagenic damage caused by radiation, instead showing it can be attributed either to experimental error or other toxic effects. In February 2018, Japan renewed the export of fish caught off Fukushima's nearshore zone. According to prefecture officials, no seafood had been found with radiation levels exceeding Japan safety standards since April 2015. In 2018, Thailand was the first country to receive a shipment of fresh fish from Japan's Fukushima prefecture. A group campaigning to help prevent global warming has demanded the Food and Drug Administration disclose the name of the importer of fish from Fukushima and of the Japanese restaurants in Bangkok serving it. Srisuwan Janya, chairman of the Stop Global Warming Association, said the FDA must protect the rights of consumers by ordering restaurants serving Fukushima fish to make that information available to their customers, so they could decide whether to eat it or not. In February 2022, Japan suspended the sale of
black rockfish from Fukushima after it was discovered that one fish from Soma had 180 times more radioactive Cesium-137 than legally permitted. The high levels of radioactivity led investigators to believe it had escaped from a breakwater at the accident site, despite nets intended to prevent fish from leaving the area. Forty-four other fish from the accident site have shown similar levels.
Radiation effects in agriculture On 20 March 2011, vegetables produced in six prefectures in the Kanto and Tohoku regions exceeded provisional regulation values. The government subsequently prohibited Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi and Gunma prefectures from shipping vegetables in which radioactive materials exceeding provisional regulation values had been detected. Additionally, The Federal Office for Radiation Protection found that foodstuffs were contaminated by radioactive material that was deposited on the leaves or directly on agricultural produce, such as fruit and vegetables, or that was absorbed via the roots of fruit and vegetables. Considering the use of land for crop cultivation, radiocesium concentration in the top layer of the soil had to be evaluated. Without disturbance of soil surface, radiocesium was accumulated within about 5 cm of the soil surface, which could affect food safety. The authors found that the agri-food industry in Fukushima Prefecture has been heavily impacted, with serious negative effects extending to other regions and the national food supply. Agri-food radiation regulation and food safety inspection in Japan prior to the accident were sparse, and have been characterized as inadequate. Provisional regulatory limits for radionuclides in agri-food products were introduced after Fukushima. These became the world's strictest in 2012. == Investigations ==