Currently, it is stable with continuous water injection, but there is a risk. However, instead of protective clothing, it changed to ordinary work clothes.

It has been 13 years since the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Unlike the Chernobyl accident, the radiation exposure of residents was extremely low, and it can be said that there are almost no general residents with effective doses exceeding 5 millisieverts per year. The radiation exposure from a CT scan is 7 millisieverts, so you can see how small the amount of radiation exposure is.

In particular, the radioactivity of distributed food was thoroughly controlled. The standard value for radioactivity in general foods such as rice and meat was set at 100 becquerels per kilogram, which is about 1/12 of that in the EU and the United States.

Airborne monitoring is continuously carried out within and outside the 80 km radius of the power station.

This issue is a long battle for Japan.

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It must be so tough for the ppl that have to work there. I remember how scared ppl were after Chernobyl. I got constantly told that there needs to be Iodin in the cooking salt. Im not sure how true it was, the older I got the more it felt like a fluoride in water fake out.

I see, I honestly don't know the correct answer either.

No worries. :)