Some readers were wondering if radioactive cesium had been detected in the type of Japanese green tea in fine powder - maccha (抹茶). So I googled it, and up came the report by Seikatsu Club (co-op), as follows:
Maccha 早春の香 (Shinsei Watarai-cha): total cesium 11 Bq/kg. Tea was made [into maccha form] in April.
Maccha 早春の香 (Shinsei Watarai-cha): total cesium 66 Bq/kg. Tea was made [into maccha form] in March.
4/16/2012:
Maccha 早春の香 (Shinsei Watarai-cha): total cesium 37 Bq/kg. Tea was made [into maccha form] in April.
There is no information when the tea was picked.
Shinsei Watarai-cha is an organic tea grown in Watarai-cho in Mie Prefecture.
On checking the environmental database by Japan Chemical Analysis Center, I've found that the highest level of radioactive cesium (Cs-137) in green tea in Mie Prefecture was in 1988 at 2.9 becquerels/kg. In the past 10 years, it was either "not detected" or less than 0.1 becquerels/kg.
Watarai-cho is located just southwest of Ise City in Mie. Ise City is famous for the Ise Grand Shrine.
By the way, Mie Prefecture is accepting the disaster debris from Iwate and Miyagi. The governor of Mie signed the agreements with his counterparts in Iwate and Miyagi, despite oppositions from mayors in Mie, including the mayor of Ise City and the mayor of Watarai-cho.
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UPDATE: comments from people I follow on Twitter:
Kontan_Bigcat: 7 to 9 becquerels/kg of cesium was detected last year from tea in Mie.
Kouta Kinoshita: it is possible that the number is high relative to the level of contamination in Mie, because the tea was organically grown.
UPDATE 2:
The tea that was made into maccha tea was from Aichi Prefecture, east of Mie Prefecture, even though the company who made the maccha tea is a tea grower and blender in Mie Prefecture.
14 comments:
Not related to Macha but i found this interesting..and maddenning..
http://forums.eslcafe.com/job/viewtopic.php?t=95804
Cognitive dissonance by Foreigners here , so its not just limited to the Japanese...
turning Japanese...
Even more delusion here
http://forums.eslcafe.com/job/viewtopic.php?t=93546&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=15
I think they are turning Japanese i really think so.... ��
Latest test of Tea by Securitytokyo.com
http://securitytokyo.com/data/tokyosayama.html
214 bq per kg !
I used to love green tea. Gave it up months ago thanks to Japan government mismanagement that allows radioactive product on the market, a government that turns a blind eye to blending contaminated and uncontaminated tea, and a government that punishes source labeling cheats with a slap on the wrist.
Yes Japan, your brand has been destroyed by your government's poor management of the food supply.
I love matcha. This is horrible! I find the blithe complacency regarding three melted down reactors and one open air spent fuel pool in a wrecked building in an earthquake zone to be utterly amazing. Never underestimate the power of denial in the face of true horror.
Is Kyoto tea contaminated?
Laprimavera, can you find any info on this please?
Thanks.
Kyoto tea most probably is contaminated but not too much, I saw results from Greenpeace i think that even tea in Miyazaki had cesium in it although small amounts.. Tea, Spinach, Mushrooms are cesium magnets
A recent blog by Professor Takeda (he is not an end of the world person) suggest by 2015 Japan will surpass the 5mSv/yr limit. The data he is using is from Mie.
@anon at 5;19AM, as far as the testing by the Kyoto prefectural government goes, radioactive cesium in all produce in Kyoto, including tea, is non-detectable level, using the germanium semiconductor detector. You can download the excel file from the Kyoto gov website: http://www.pref.kyoto.jp/shoku-anshin/1305101639879.html
@Chibaguy, yes I read that, too. I'm still trying to figure out whether that makes sense. Mathematically it doesn't make sense (why linear equation?), but without the raw numbers can't even verify. No info whether the survey meter is calibrated. Pre-Fukushima number for Mie was 0.042 microsievert/hour.
@arevamirpal::laprimavera,
Many thanks for digging up the information.
I'm not generally a big-green tea drinker, but I do keep matcha in the house and often whip up a bowl of it to relax. I also make matcha milk, matcha ice cream, matcha bread, matcha cookies ... etc. It's good to know that Kyoto tea seems to be okay.
Kyushu matcha seems to be rare, but I found this page for Fukuoka Yame tea (in Japanese):
http://www.meihin-kyushu.com/mall/kurasumi/
800-1200 yen for a 20g can. (Eek. I usually buy the cheap stuff.) I don't know anything about cesium content for the above tea.
Just heard this Rense interview about Fukushima.... Rense said that EXSKF blogger is a woman... For some reason i thought it was a guy... Wow.
http://rense.gsradio.net:8080/rense/special/rense_Wilcox_030112.mp3
...
Ex-SKF is a gal? If so, I would have to readjust my mental picture. Also, issue a huge HUZZAH!
Anon, in a nano-gram of Cs-137 you already have 3,214 Becquerels and a micro-gram would be 3,214,000 Becquerels. The chemical toxicity of stable cesium is nothing compared to the damage that those kind of activities may cause.
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=cesium-137
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