FRANCE: Paris warns of spread of radioactivity from Japan

By Keith Nuthall | 5 April 2011

French government nuclear scientists have warned that radioactive material, usually totally absent from food, has been discovered in milk in France.

The French Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety (IRSN) said radioactive iodine-131 has been found in densities of of 0.09 becquerels per litre near Paris and 0.15bq/l in the Loire valley, western France. This is well below legal European Union legal maximums of 2,000bq/kg, or approximately 1,941 bq/l.

IRSN suggested that the contamination was the result of radioactive clouds belching from the stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan, but added that it "presents no environmental or health hazard".

However, as iodine-131 should not be in food the institute will continue to monitor the situation.

Sectors: Dairy, Food safety, Sustainability & the environment

View next/previous articles

Currently reading -

FRANCE: Paris warns of spread of radioactivity from Japan

There are currently no comments on this article

Be the first to comment on this article

Welcome to the home of food information, insight & intelligence

Not a member? Join here

Decrease font sizeDecrease font sizeDecrease font size Increase font sizeIncrease font sizeIncrease font size Comment on this article Email this to a friend Print this page