EGU23-12670
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-12670
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Minimizing the loss of radioactively contaminated sediment from the Niida watershed (Fukushima, Japan) through spatially targeted afforestation.

Floris Abrams1,2, Lieve Sweeck1, Johan Camps1, Grethell Castillo-Reyes2, Bin Feng3, Yuichi Onda3, and Jos Van Orshoven2
Floris Abrams et al.
  • 1Belgian Nuclear Research Centre, Biosphere Impact Studies, Belgium (floris.abrams@sckcen.be)
  • 2KULeuven, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Belgium (floris.abrams@kuleuven.be)
  • 3University of Tsukuba, Center for research in Isotopes and environmental dynamics, Japan

Government-led decontamination of agricultural land in the Fukushima accident (2011) region has lowered the on-site radiation risk considerably. From 2013 to early 2017, 11.9% of the land in the Fukushima disaster affected Niida watershed in Japan was remediated through topsoil removal. However, this resulted in a 237.1% increase in suspended sediment loads in the river for 2016 compared to 2013.  In contrast, sediment loads decreased by 41% from 2016 to 2017; this can be attributed to the effect of natural vegetation restoration on sediment yield and transfer patterns (Bin et al., 2022). Since radiocaesium firmly binds to the clay minerals in the soil, it is inevitably transported along with the sediments downstream to the river systems. These observations confirm that rapid, spatially targeted interventions, such as revegetation, e.g., through afforestation, have the potential to decrease the magnitude and period of increased exports of contaminated sediments. The CAMF tool (Cellular Automata-based Heuristic for Minimizing Flow) (Vanegas et al., 2012) was originally designed to find the cells in a raster representation of a watershed for which afforestation would lead to a maximal reduction of sediment exports with minimal effort or cost while taking sediment flow from cell to cell into account. In our research, we adapted the CAMF tool to account for the radiocaesium budgets associated with the transported sediments. We applied the approach to the Niida catchment, where land-cover changes in upstream decontaminated regions are detected using drone imagery and linked to increased sediment loads in the Niida river using long-term river monitoring systems. For example In 2014, agricultural land (18.02 km2) was one of the major land uses in the regions where decontamination was ordered, resulting in increased sediment loads from 2014 to 2016. By recognizing both the on- and off-site impacts of the remediation interventions and their temporal dynamics, the modified CAMF tool offers scope for supporting the formulation of spatio-temporal schemes for the remediation of agricultural land. These schemes aim to decrease the radiation risk for downstream communities and minimize the potential recontamination of already decontaminated sites.

How to cite: Abrams, F., Sweeck, L., Camps, J., Castillo-Reyes, G., Feng, B., Onda, Y., and Van Orshoven, J.: Minimizing the loss of radioactively contaminated sediment from the Niida watershed (Fukushima, Japan) through spatially targeted afforestation., EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-12670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-12670, 2023.