Japan: Fukushima’s radioactive legacy | DW Documentary
Every new tsunami alert in Japan triggers traumatic memories of March 11, 2011 and fears of another nuclear meltdown. 15 years after a tsunami led to disaster at the Fukushima power plant, Japan is still dealing with the fallout.
Hundreds of tons of radioactive debris are still stored at the Fukushima plant today. What does this region look like now? Is it habitable? And what conditions do the people who choose to live there face? Cécile Asunama Brice, sociologist and researcher at the Tokyo office of the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), took a film crew to Route 114. The road runs through the contaminated zone, stretching from an area near the nuclear plant to the Fukushima Prefecture’s northwest. For a long time after the disaster, the road remained closed. Still today, the route is lined with abandoned villages and thousands of bags of contaminated soil. It passes through forests where the soil will remain polluted with radionuclides like cesium 137 for centuries to come. Some of the people who live here have been fighting against government disinformation since the disaster.
The route ends at the Pacific Ocean near the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. There, tanks containing treated radioactive cooling water are being emptied into the ocean —despite opposition from the fishing industry and neighboring countries.
Over 880 tons of radioactive debris still lie inside the damaged reactors. They pose an ongoing risk to the region — and it could take another four decades or more to decommission the plant.
#documentary #dwdocumentary #dwdocs #japan #fukushima
______
DW Documentary (English): https://www.youtube.com/@DWDocumentary
DW Documental (Spanish): https://www.youtube.com/@DWDocumental
DW Documentary وثائقية دي دبليو (Arabic): https://www.youtube.com/@DWDocarabia
DW Documentary हिन्दी (Hindi): https://www.youtube.com/@dwdochindi
DW Dokumenter (Indonesian): https://www.youtube.com/@DWDokumenter
DW Doku (German): https://www.youtube.com/@DWDoku
Watch the video by DW Documentary
About DW Documentary
DW Documentary gives you information beyond the headlines. Watch top documentaries from German broadcasters and international production companies. Meet intriguing people, travel to distant lands, get a look behind the complexities of daily life and build a deeper understanding of current affairs and global events.
Video “Japan: Fukushima’s radioactive legacy | DW Documentary” was uploaded on 03/17/2026 by DW Documentary Youtube channel.
































This is so sad, not only for Japanese people, but for all human beings.
I literally just thought about watching a documentary about Japan and nukes regarding what's going on in the world and here we are. A new video
Not temple, it is a shrine. Please please send a person knows well about Japan.
Elderly people shouldn't have been displaced from their homes, just because of low levels of radiation. We've done more harm to them by expelling them from their houses, than the radiation could.
JAPAN POURING NUCLEAR WASTEWATER INTO PACIFIC OCEAN 🙁
It wasn't that bad.
I understand Japan’s apprehension to nuclear power considering the traumatic incidents, but they also built a nuclear plant on the water… nuclear energy is safe, if you build the plants correctly. And the waste it produces is vastly smaller than its energy output. It is foolish to outright demonize it.
The rest of the world got lucky with this disaster
Nuclear reactors are insane .. but so is authority .. so we’re fked anyway
The Heroes of Fukushima are Still Standing…
Whenever someone touts nuclear power as sustainable, show them this:
I'm surprised that long term radiation contamination wasn't as severe after the nuclear bombs were dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Haven't had seafood since it happened and never will
Water is pumped in to cool the molten fuel, water is pumped out, some of which comes from wells. How much water is lost in the process? Some of this lost water can be accounted through evaporation but how much drains down into the groundwater? I have looked through TEPCO reports but there is no information on that subject.
The effect on humans and fish is negligible. BS
Where are the robots to clean this mess up i still saw people in excabators just a facemask😂😂😂
Back then some Vietnamese trainees reportedly were sent to Fukushima for soil removal and similar tasks even though their contracts said they were supposed to learn construction skills.
It's a shame Japan still resorts to pretending everything is fine, nothing happened, instead of owning up to past mistakes or atrocities.
Right now, they’re just pouring nuclear waste water into the Pacific Ocean. Enjoy!🍻
Nuclear disaster or not, the compiling nuclear waste is a disaster itself.
When will humans learn?
THE DAYS was a great movie to understand the situation of 3.11
9:55 These radiation levels are utterly insignificant. They act like measurable = scary.
quite biased and fearmongering doc but interesting regardless
The entire "nuclear power" myth just breaks my heart. It is only using that horribly dangerous fuel to boil water. There must be more realistic ways to boil water. It isn't nuclear power it is steam power. Radioactivity is not even the right temperature for boiling water. It is far too hot and takes constant cooling.
This protective gear they're wearing only protects them against carrying radioactive debris, it doesn't actually do anything to stop the radiation itself.
TEPCO pocketed the profits, and when the disaster hit, the cost is distributed among the ordinary working people. This is beauty of Capitalist system.
It is a human defect that those whom we presume to be our leaders lie so much to hide their appalling mistakes. We are all victims of men and women who think they are right when the truth is, that they are very wrong indeed…
She sure is concerned about Japanese culture, considering she’s not Japanese