Made in Fukushima: Japan farmers struggle to win trust

| | Koriyama (Japan)

The pumpkin is diced, the chicken carved and the eggs beaten into an omelette, but the people preparing the food are not chefs — they are scientists testing produce from Japan’s Fukushima region.

Seven years after the March 2011 nuclear disaster caused by a devastating tsunami, rigorous testing shows no radioactive threat from Fukushima’s produce, officials and experts say.

But local producers say they still face crippling suspicion from consumers.

More than 205,000 food items have been tested at the Fukushima Agricultural Technology Centre since March 2011, with Japan setting a standard of no more than 100 becquerels of radioactivity per kilogramme (Bq/kg). The European Union, by comparison, sets that level at 1,250 Bq/kg and the US at 1,200. In the last year, the centre says no cultivated produce or farm-reared livestock has exceeded the government’s limit.