France will offer free iodine tablets to around 2.2
million people living close to nuclear plants to help protect them from
radiation in case of an accident.
Nuclear regulator ASN said on
Tuesday people living within 10-20 km (about 6-12 miles) of one of
utility EDF's 19 nuclear plants, as well as some 200,000 institutions
such as schools, will receive a letter in coming days informing them
that they can pick up free iodine tablets from pharmacies.
Five
years after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan in 2011, France
distributed free iodine to people living within 10 km of a nuclear
plant, but is now widening that radius.
French daily Les Echos
quoted a nuclear information official as saying that in 2016 only about
half of the people targeted bothered to pick up their iodine.
Nuclear accidents typically release radioactive iodine in
the atmosphere. When inhaled or swallowed, it is absorbed by the thyroid
gland, where it can lead to cancer in later years. By saturating the
thyroid gland with stable iodine, it will no longer absorb radioactive
iodine.
The ASN said that in case of a nuclear accident, people
living nearby need to seek shelter in buildings, monitor the situation
via the media and not go and pick up their children at school. They also
should limit telephone communication, take iodine and prepare for a
possible evacuation.
The American Thyroid Association says on its
website that when thyroid cells take in too much radioactive iodine,
this can cause thyroid cancer to develop several years after the
exposure. Babies and young children are at highest risk, while the risk
is much lower for people over 40.
France is the world's most
nuclear-reliant nation, with three quarters of its electricity produced
in state-owned EDF's 58 nuclear reactors in 19 plants spread all over
the country.
Most French people live within a few hundred
kilometers of a nuclear plant. EDF's Nogent-sur-Seine plant is about 100
km east of Paris, while the nuclear plants of Penly and Paluel are
about 180 km northwest of Paris, on the Atlantic coast.
The river Rhone in the Provence region of southern France also has several nuclear plants along its banks
PARIS (Reuters) - France to Give Iodine to More People Living Close to Nuclear Plants - Medscape - Sep 18, 2019.
No comments:
Post a Comment