Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2023-08-23 05:16
Hong Kong weighs seafood safety certification for restaurants amid fears over Japan’s Fukushima waste water discharge
Related news
- Seafood Is Safe After Fukushima Discharge, But Some Won’t Eat ItThe New York Times
- Japan’s plan to discharge Fukushima water into the sea, report to be released in AprilSouth China Morning Post
- SSouth Korea PM offers to drink treated Fukushima water to soothe critics of Japan’s discharge planscmp.com
- SWhy the worry at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear waste discharge plan? France has done it ‘for decades’scmp.com
- Fukushima discharge row: Hong Kong experts warn over radioactive contamination risk for Japanese seafood if waste water releasedSouth China Morning Post
- Fukushima discharge row: is Hong Kong’s ban on Japanese seafood imports an overreaction or one grounded in science?South China Morning Post
- Fukushima discharge row: Hong Kong restaurants will not be compensated if city bans Japanese seafood, environment chief saysSouth China Morning Post
- Fukushima row: Hong Kong’s Japanese seafood ban ‘necessary’ if waste water discharge goes ahead, John Lee tells country’s envoySouth China Morning Post
- Japan’s government plans to buy seafood if Fukushima water release affects salesThe Japan Times
- Russia weighs ban on Japanese seafood imports over Fukushima water releaseFox News
- Fukushima row: Japan’s top diplomat in Hong Kong accuses city officials of failing to show scientific proof behind seafood banSouth China Morning Post
- Japanese people in Hong Kong defend country’s decision to discharge Fukushima radioactive water into Pacific Ocean and insist seafood is safe to eatSouth China Morning Post
- Fukushima waste water: no room for Hong Kong to ease ban on Japanese seafood, environment chief says before second round of dischargeSouth China Morning Post
- Fisheries opposed to Fukushima water discharge planThe Japan Times
- Japan set to decide on timing of Fukushima water dischargeAl Jazeera
- What’s ahead for Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plantThe Findlay Courier
- Japan’s plan for Fukushima wastewater: Three questionscsmonitor.com
- Japan tells WTO China’s seafood ban over Fukushima water ‘unacceptable’Al Jazeera
- China halts all Japanese seafood imports over 'selfish' Fukushima releasetimesofmalta.com