"the number of tests conducted on beef from Fukushima was 45―a sampling
that probably represents less than 1% of what has been shipped."

The point is, IMHO, beef has one of the best traceability system because
of BSE. When more than 99% of beef has been shipped out WITHOUT
radiation test, what do you expect to other food products? - Midori

Tainted Beef Hits Japanese Market Authorities Find Radioactive Cesium in
Shipments to Shops and Restaurants
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303678704576441682767970202.html?KEYWORDS=japan+cesium
wsj.com JULY 13, 2011

By PHRED DVORAKTOKYO―Japan grappled with a fresh radiation scare
Tuesday, as authorities found that beef contaminated with radioactive
cesium had been shipped to shops and restaurants throughout the country.
The beef, from six cattle raised on a farm near the stricken Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear plant, registered radioactive-cesium levels up to seven
times that permitted by Japanese food-safety standards. Some of the meat
had already likely been eaten, government officials said.

Experts said the level was too low to create health problems in people
who ate just one or two servings. But the discovery dominated local news
and TV shows, reminding Japanese consumers that they will be living with
the threat of radiation for a long time to come―and highlighting holes
in the way Japan is testing cattle for radioactive exposure.
The beef scare, coming after reports of radiation contamination in food
had largely died down, reignited worries that the damaged Fukushima
reactors could be poisoning staples from water to produce to fish. A
month ago Japanese testers found higher-than-permitted levels of
radioactive material in tea leaves that grew more than 200 miles from
the nuclear plant―a sign contamination had spread farther than
previously thought.
That contaminated beef had gotten into the food supply shocked the
public. The scramble to locate the meat started Saturday, when the Tokyo
government said it had found elevated radioactive-cesium levels in meat
from other cattle raised on the same farm in Minamisoma, around 18 miles
north of the Fukushima Daiichi plant. The six cattle―which had all
passed external radiation tests―had been shipped earlier to Tokyo
butchers, who had gone on to sell the meat to wholesalers and retail
shops in eight prefectures, or states, and metropolitan areas.
Some of the meat is still unaccounted for, but some appears already to
have been bought by consumers, said a spokeswoman from the Tokyo
metropolitan government's food-monitoring division. The impact on beef
sales is so far unclear.
Radioactive cesium emits gamma rays, which can damage cellular DNA and
raise the risk of cancer. The levels found in the beef, though, would
become a health concern only if a person ate large quantities every day
for a year, said Shizuko Kakinuma, a researcher at Japan's National
Institute of Radiological Sciences who sits on an independent committee
investigating the Fukushima Daiichi accident. "With a Japanese diet,
that's unlikely," she said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.
One or two meals wouldn't have much effect.
Still, the government ought to increase its testing of cattle for
radiation contamination to at least one animal from each herd, said Ms.
Kakinuma, as it is possible to lower the amount of radioactive cesium in
contaminated animals to safe levels.

"It would be better not to rush them to the butcher," said Ms. Kakinuma.
Officials in Fukushima said the prefecture had performed external tests
on all cattle raised in zones near the nuclear plant where radiation
levels have been high. The cattle whose meat proved contaminated had
cleared those tests, said Yutaka Kashima, an official in the
prefecture's animal husbandry section.
The prefecture also asked farmers to fill out a questionnaire to help
determine the risk of exposure. Questions included what kind of water
the cattle drank, where they were housed and what kind of food they ate.
The farm that produced the contaminated meat had said it hadn't given
its cattle contaminated feed―which turned out to be untrue, Mr. Kashima
said.
The farmer later admitted he had fed his cattle straw that had been
exposed to the elements―as well as radiation fallout―and that subsequent
tests found to contain extremely high levels of radioactive cesium. That
caused internal contamination that wasn't detectable by the prefecture's
screening.
Fukushima and other localities also test some meat from potentially
contaminated areas after the cattle are butchered. But only a few of
those time-consuming test have been done. A spokesman at the health
ministry said that prior to Saturday's discovery of contaminated meat,
the number of tests conducted on beef from Fukushima was 45―a sampling
that probably represents less than 1% of what has been shipped.

Write to Phred Dvorak at [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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