New Zealand confident about IAEA advice on Fukushima water release plan

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Mr Grossi will meet with Pacific Islands Forum chair and Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown.

Plans to release some 500 Olympic size swimming pools worth of water from the Fukushimi plant were consistent with global safety standards.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

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- New Zealand Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta told the head of the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog on Monday that her government has full confidence in the IAEA’s advice on the

proposed Fukushima treated water release.

“I also felt it was important to draw attention to the Pacific’s traumatic experience with nuclear testing and asked directly that meaningful engagement continue with the Pacific region on the proposed release,” she said in a statement following the meeting with Mr Rafael Grossi, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

After a two-year review, the IAEA said Japan’s plans to release some

500 Olympic size swimming pools worth of water from the Fukushimi plant

wrecked by a

tsunami more than a decade ago

were consistent with global safety standards and that they would have a “negligible radiological impact to people and the environment”.

Following the release of the report, Mr Grossi visited South Korea.

He is currently in New Zealand before travelling to the Cook Islands, where he will meet with Pacific Islands Forum chair and Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown.

The Pacific Islands Forum, a regional bloc of 17 island nations, has

raised significant concerns

about the release of the water, fearing among other things the impact on fisheries.

Ms Mahuta said New Zealand acutely understands the effects nuclear testing has had on its Pacific neighbours in the past, and the government would continue to call for the release of the water to be dealt with through transparency and meaningful dialogue. REUTERS

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