All the below tweets are in English.
取り急ぎ以下貼っておきます。放出の件については、他国が放出している正確な量に係る英語情報を一刻も早く国際的に大きな声で流通させなければなりません。社会的事実と自然科学が必須です。
Prime Minister SUGA Yoshihide departed for Washington DC to have his first meeting with POTUS Joe Biden on April 16. On this occasion, PM Suga contributed an article today on @WSJ, “Japan’s Path to Growth and Stability in the Pacific”: https://t.co/2N7aFi498F#USJapan #日米 pic.twitter.com/cvkjEUlhng
— The Gov't of Japan (@JapanGov) April 15, 2021
Japan to expand quasi-emergency measures, casting fresh doubts on Olympics https://t.co/gdGSPGKhrv
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 16, 2021
Japan Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s visit to D.C. is about countering China. It’s still politically thorny for the U.S. to rejoin the transpacific trade pact, but the timing could be better once COVID is past. From @Breakingviews: https://t.co/WucYr6IHIv https://t.co/WucYr6IHIv
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 16, 2021
Biden, Suga poised to present united front on Taiwan as China steps up pressure https://t.co/4RwvrtUyGx
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 16, 2021
A decision by the Japanese government to release contaminated water left over from the Fukushima nuclear disaster into the ocean, was met with skepticism by many who are dependent on the sea for their livelihoods https://t.co/eZE5e7gTJM pic.twitter.com/eQwWM06yHT
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2021
China says it shares stance with South Korea opposing Japan's Fukushima water release https://t.co/ba8dy8xsDt pic.twitter.com/AmSyGoIxdk
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2021
Biden, Suga to send signal to assertive China at U.S.-Japan summit https://t.co/5JueG3YBRj pic.twitter.com/c84LJlYZQd
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2021
Japan state-backed funds consider offer for Toshiba: report https://t.co/ECocdiSpiN pic.twitter.com/xJk1Ike9tO
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2021
Japan ruling party official says cancelling Olympics is an option: Kyodo https://t.co/DaWyDEz5xO pic.twitter.com/kWkELqUkzi
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2021
Illuminations on Tokyo's tallest building were dampened by bad weather as Japan marked 100 days until the Olympic Games pic.twitter.com/9AR4cpSz8y
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
South Korea's Moon seeks international litigation over Japan's Fukushima water decision https://t.co/BOGvYFmngE pic.twitter.com/a6iUXo87uj
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
China-linked Japan shares shunned ahead of PM Suga's U.S. visit https://t.co/AdNqnMtha5 pic.twitter.com/VmSyvxTRDA
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 15, 2021
Japan unveiled the blue and pink Olympic mascots pic.twitter.com/lYfJRVf8XB
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
When Japan won the bid to host the Olympic Games eight years ago, it billed Tokyo as a reliable and secure location, contrasting it with rivals struggling with finances and political instability https://t.co/e83JHgy2PP
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
UAE partners with Japan's iSpace to send rover to the moon in 2022 https://t.co/FG1DxIFVrv pic.twitter.com/mjolbmP9la
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
Japan halts Tepco plan to restart key nuclear plant after safety breaches https://t.co/Hsqkj5FxeB pic.twitter.com/Hz5aqSvFSw
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
Surprise drop in Japan machinery orders stokes recovery fears https://t.co/xou7zbnzPW pic.twitter.com/sDLcmmJ6SN
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 14, 2021
⚡️ “How Japan plans to release contaminated Fukushima water into the ocean” by @ReutersScience https://t.co/0Bo7ORqjhb
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Japan says it will release more than a million tons of contaminated water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear station into the sea. The plant's operator, TEPCO, will filter the water to remove harmful radioactive isotopes https://t.co/AvbXdJkS0m pic.twitter.com/iGoXNU7MGx
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company will begun pumping out water in about two years after treatment in a process that will take decades to complete. Here's how Japan plans to release contaminated Fukushima water into the ocean https://t.co/aEu7hZFtRP
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Japan plans to release into the sea more than 1 million tons of contaminated water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear station, the government said https://t.co/AvbXdJ3h8O pic.twitter.com/O9mxjNpwSA
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Countries react to Japan's plans to release Fukushima water into ocean https://t.co/mj6UIdOu4h pic.twitter.com/Kb5md6k9rX
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Japan Olympic adviser urges COVID-19 vaccine option for athletes https://t.co/IQocIYoEXP pic.twitter.com/lHNCDpcp0L
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
New coronavirus cases in Japan's Osaka to exceed 1,000 on Tuesday: media https://t.co/lCDWUX9h4y pic.twitter.com/E2PmVFp44t
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
BOJ's Kuroda says weak yen promises to benefit Japan's economy https://t.co/coVN5GAeJL pic.twitter.com/5wG6e4R5ou
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Fukushima water release doesn't contradict situation 'under control' statement: PM Suga https://t.co/QY0B34yhFd pic.twitter.com/xIHh5ULqmY
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Japan says to release contaminated Fukushima water into sea https://t.co/t2vqaagnwD pic.twitter.com/wb1cwmfGut
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
U.S. expresses support for Japan's release of Fukushima nuclear plant water https://t.co/5OMytoayx8 pic.twitter.com/iOSknOE0CC
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 13, 2021
Japan began COVID-19 vaccinations for its elderly population with imported doses still in short supply https://t.co/TBN8nYrXZv pic.twitter.com/9Kb07ciHTz
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 12, 2021
Mitsubishi Motors to cut output in Japan and Thailand due to chip shortage https://t.co/eNUGfas9WI pic.twitter.com/CgQKS1QMTb
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 12, 2021
Japan wholesale prices rise for first time in 13 months as global recovery boosts commodity costs https://t.co/cDAV5l0uK1 pic.twitter.com/ki0FHH8scV
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 12, 2021
Japan's Hideki Matsuyama wins the Masters for a maiden major victory https://t.co/WYROUeDAqo pic.twitter.com/4jfJWnbJjM
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 12, 2021
Japan beermaker Asahi looks to halve debt after buying Australia assets https://t.co/LA9u0sz9Pi pic.twitter.com/P8MbZVteyg
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 9, 2021
Japan's February core machinery orders seen rebounding: Reuters poll https://t.co/GPsOeOgsaE pic.twitter.com/l0eR8lEs0w
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 9, 2021
Japan industry minister denies raising 2030 emissions reduction target to 45% https://t.co/CPPHOahAhe pic.twitter.com/CzlO2TPuVO
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 9, 2021
Japan to add Tokyo, other areas to COVID-19 'quasi-emergency' state https://t.co/w2E2genJZL pic.twitter.com/zkZ5fZ2aRv
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 9, 2021
Japan looks to raise 2030 emissions cut target to at least 40% – Kyodo https://t.co/gNlR5h5J62 pic.twitter.com/BT5VyiKusC
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 8, 2021
Tokyo's Koike says will ask government for emergency measures to stem COVID-19 rise https://t.co/DrwD2N7gUQ pic.twitter.com/37nEjvLenD
— Reuters (@Reuters) April 8, 2021
Fishing communities in Japan are alarmed over the decision to release contaminated water stored at the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, a move that has also set off a diplomatic ruckus with neighbours China and South Korea. https://t.co/GXqt3yerpZ
— Reuters Science News (@ReutersScience) April 15, 2021
Japan denies considering vaccine priority for Olympic athleteshttps://t.co/1fLIevUHXW via @Reuters
— eigonomics (@eigonomics) April 9, 2021
"South Korean vendors at a fish market in the capital Seoul and opposition party members called on the government to take actions to have Japan drop plans to release contaminated water from its wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea." @Reuters https://t.co/bRRpUNhYzf
— The Korea Society (@koreasociety) April 15, 2021
"NKorea, they said, 'will pose an increasing threat to the US, SKorea, & Japan' as it upgrades its conventional military capabilities. Pyongyang’s interest in developing weapons of mass destruction will remain a major concern…" @JonathanLanday @Reutershttps://t.co/NhuUMce9OK
— The Korea Society (@koreasociety) April 14, 2021
The postponed Tokyo Olympics open in 100 days. Tokyo was awarded the Olympics as “a safe pair of hands.” Nothing is certain now. Organizers and the IOC push on despite COVID-19 risks, myriad scandals, and public opposition in Japan to holding the Games. https://t.co/icCmw3B77K
— The Associated Press (@AP) April 14, 2021
Japan says it plans to start releasing huge amounts of treated radioactive water into the sea in two years' time. The water is stored in tanks at the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant which melted down ten years ago. https://t.co/3fNYyjI6N1
— The Associated Press (@AP) April 12, 2021
From Japan’s prime minister on down the country celebrated golfer Hideki Matsuyama’s victory in the Masters. He is the first Japanese player to win at Augusta National and wear the famous green jacket. https://t.co/fhhkE6OaEk
— The Associated Press (@AP) April 12, 2021
Japan is set to strengthen anti-virus measures in Tokyo to curb the rapid spread of a more contagious coronavirus variant just three months before the Olympics begin in the capital where most people are not yet vaccinated. https://t.co/Jotrmwkugj
— The Associated Press (@AP) April 9, 2021
Doctors in Japan say they have successfully performed the world’s first transplant of lung tissue from living donors to a patient with severe lung damage from COVID-19. Kyoto University Hospital says the patient is recovering after the operation. https://t.co/A8vC7sGyIa
— The Associated Press (@AP) April 8, 2021
Tokyo has asked Japan's central government for permission to implement emergency measures to curb a surge in a rapidly spreading and more contagious coronavirus variant, just over three months before the start of the Olympics. https://t.co/jj1wBqfuc3
— The Associated Press (@AP) April 8, 2021
A woman in Japan whose lungs were damaged by COVID-19 received a transplant of parts of her husband's and son's lungs. Via @AP https://t.co/7RmXtsW42b
— The Scientist (@TheScientistLLC) April 10, 2021
The Olympic flame is on its way across Japan and athletes around the world are ramping up training, but 100 days before Tokyo 2020 opens, organisers still face monumental challenges https://t.co/Qhv6HqGhYP#AFPSports #Tokyo2020 pic.twitter.com/3Fp0CLXjoO
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 13, 2021
How the first Tokyo #Olympics changed the face of Japan.
The 1964 summer Olympic Games were Japan's great return to the world stage after its defeat and destruction two decades earlier in World War IIhttps://t.co/7zuKTuPGSB pic.twitter.com/FyZSWJGabT
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 13, 2021
VIDEO: Japan to release treated Fukushima water into the sea.
Japan will release more than a million tonnes of treated water from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga says, despite concern from locals and neighbouring countries pic.twitter.com/BYWEQ7fJzN
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 13, 2021
#UPDATE China slams Japan's plan to release over one million tonnes of water from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean.
"This approach is extremely irresponsible and will seriously damage international public health and safety"
📸Tanks for contaminated water at Fukushima pic.twitter.com/ITpK2P6VY7
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 13, 2021
Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Around 1.25 million tonnes of water has accumulated at the site of the nuclear plant, which went into meltdown following a tsunami in 2011.
It includes water used to cool the plant, as well as rain and groundwater that seeps in daily pic.twitter.com/5jdk8MtWA8
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 13, 2021
#UPDATE Japan will release over one million tonnes of treated water from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean.
The release – unlikely to begin for two years – has sparked opposition from fishing communities and concern in Beijing and Seoulhttps://t.co/dE9A5o0lws pic.twitter.com/d3D1f3vmGf
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 13, 2021
#BREAKING Japan to release treated Fukushima water into the sea: PM pic.twitter.com/fC92FN4apS
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 12, 2021
Japan has decided to release treated water from the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea, reports said Friday, despite strong opposition from local fishermenhttps://t.co/chA5wBhFvK
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) April 9, 2021
Nice @AFP video featuring a maker of Japan's lute-like shamisen, who had hoped to introduce the instrument to overseas visitors at this summer's Olympics: https://t.co/mii1urUOHA
— Sara Hussein (@sarahussein) April 16, 2021
Today marks 100 days until the virus-postponed @Tokyo2020 Olympics. On the one hand, the torch relay is under way and athletes are ramping up training, on the other, virus cases are surging again, including in Japan. @AFP's story is here: https://t.co/VSaVZYVDya
— Sara Hussein (@sarahussein) April 14, 2021
Japan plans to release over a million tonnes of treated water from the Fukushima plant into the ocean. @AFP has answers to some of the common questions about the controversial decision: https://t.co/af3GYQnIJe
— Sara Hussein (@sarahussein) April 13, 2021
UPDATE | The summit is also expected to touch on the issue of chilly relations between Japan and South Korea, two close U.S. allies, a senior U.S. official says.https://t.co/0NmjT3rDmN
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 16, 2021
Suga and Biden to note Taiwan in summit joint statement: US officialhttps://t.co/ebm2jVoOwD
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 16, 2021
IN THE OVAL OFFICE | China's maritime ambitions, North Korea, supply chains, Myanmar — these are just some of the issues U.S. President Biden and Japan's Prime Minister Suga will grapple with on Friday.#Biden #Suga #USJapan https://t.co/QxlzBYYIJW
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 15, 2021
The summit has taken months to arrange because of the pandemic and the unusually contentious issues at stake.https://t.co/SiFwUbbN9t
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 15, 2021
Unusually for a Japanese leader, Yoshihide Suga will not travel with his wife on his first trip to the U.S. as prime minister.https://t.co/t535uTpYlv
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 15, 2021
U.S.-JAPAN ALLIANCE | Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga will meet with President Joe Biden at the White House this week. Just like a Clinton-Hosokawa summit 27 years ago, Northeast Asian security is expected to dominate the discussion. https://t.co/nR17O9gDH6
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 14, 2021
CHINA TECH | TOKYO REASSURES ON RAKUTEN
As part of preparations for the Suga-Biden summit, Japanese officials briefed their U.S. counterparts on the national security implications of the #Tencent group's investment in #Rakuten.https://t.co/KaajT2Ten6— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 14, 2021
UPDATE | "We have no choice but to take on the wastewater issue, as we need to proceed with decommissioning of the nuclear reactors," Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga says. #Fukushimahttps://t.co/r52qwMWTHQ
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 13, 2021
BREAKING | Japan officially approves release of Fukushima wastewater to seahttps://t.co/ur6Xl1ctQ4
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 12, 2021
Challenges including the pandemic and the Tokyo Olympics may force Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga to call an election as late as possible, or even let the lower house's term run out in October. #Japan https://t.co/mvIvQr18gd
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 12, 2021
BIDEN-SUGA MEETING | BROMANCE OR SAKURA DIPLOMACY?
"It's like cherry blossoms," Japan Society's @drjwalkr said to @MikioSugeno of Biden's focus on Japan.
"It's beautiful but only for a period of time."
Can Suga make the roots of the relationship grow?https://t.co/SGWQxWfbIB
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 9, 2021
Uniqlo and other Japanese brands are bracing for pressure from Washington to take a clear stand on human rights abuses in Xinjiang. https://t.co/dPKBf016bX
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 9, 2021
Coronavirus latest: Suga to designate Tokyo for stronger virus steps on Fridayhttps://t.co/v0lf1YEbBh
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 8, 2021
CHINA UP CLOSE | THE RED LINE
Before Japan's Suga departs for Washington, Beijing has gotten a message through to Tokyo: Taiwan is a red line — don't cross it.https://t.co/Q5Znf8nHgb
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 8, 2021
President Biden, Prime Minister Modi of India, Prime Minister Morrison of Australia and Prime Minister Suga of Japan write in @postopinions: Our four nations are committed to a free, open, secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific region https://t.co/tTkQURcokV
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) March 13, 2021
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga of Japan is the first foreign leader to be invited to the Biden White House. He is likely to be pressed to address the most glaring threat to stability in Asia: China. https://t.co/P27WzMgPxK
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 15, 2021
On Friday, Japan’s Prime Minister Suga will become the first world leader to visit Biden at the White House since he took office.
Ahead of the summit, @SchoffJ & Joshua Levy explain how the U.S. and Japan can work together on emerging technologies: https://t.co/Ou3si7PjbH
— Carnegie Endowment (@CarnegieEndow) April 14, 2021
An era of intensifying competition requires an ambitious yet realistic basis for geopolitical cooperation. The Quad is the right tool for the job, @d_jaishankar and @tanvi_madan write, but it will have to broaden and deepen its partnership.https://t.co/DYgKOzSH8Q
— Foreign Affairs (@ForeignAffairs) April 16, 2021
From sanctions to economic statecraft, Washington has numerous ways to levy costs in the international arena. Beijing’s forthcoming Olympics provide a unique opportunity to impose consequences on China’s leadership. @mike_mazza https://t.co/jOdtUi8LhT
— AEI Foreign Policy (@AEIfdp) April 14, 2021
ICYMI: Yesterday, @ishaantharoor quoted my new @AEI @AEIfdp report on the 2022 Olympics in Today's WorldView for @washingtonpost. | Should the U.S. boycott the 2022 Winter Olympics in China? https://t.co/SAcXuvlupj
— Michael “In A Move Likely To Anger China” Mazza (@mike_mazza) April 13, 2021
On Friday, Japan’s prime minister Yoshihide Suga and U.S President Joe Biden will have their first meeting. FP’s @michaelphirsh writes that they badly need to get along. https://t.co/SD12UllG9T
— Foreign Policy (@ForeignPolicy) April 14, 2021
Among other factors, the future of the Quad grouping will likely be determined by China’s behavior. @suea_thornton explores the group's utility and future: https://t.co/feHj7wMU13
— Brookings FP (@BrookingsFP) April 15, 2021
My preview of the Suga-Biden summit: https://t.co/o4QWC1r4p6 via @BrookingsInst
— Mireya Solis (@solis_msolis) April 13, 2021
Bush: President Tsai Ing-wen is relatively more focused on deterrence. #Taiwan #DifficultChoices
Watch👇 https://t.co/dB8H2wwAtK
— Brookings Foreign Policy (@BrookingsFP) April 14, 2021
Asia-Pacific stocks set for mixed start; Australia jobs data for March ahead https://t.co/VeWyvZ4CfJ
— CNBC (@CNBC) April 14, 2021
Kowloon Walled City. A team of Japanese researchers spent time until the night before it was demolished measuring and drawing the building, creating this incredible section pic.twitter.com/ntK0ckA0UB
— Philip Oldfield (@SustainableTall) March 29, 2021
Tokyo Olympics may be CANCELLED as Japan faces devastating Covid fourth wave https://t.co/nhqzXvJogd
— The Sun (@TheSun) April 15, 2021
Matsuyama hopes Masters win 'opens the floodgates' for Japan https://t.co/cZUZfPa8EL via @rtenews pic.twitter.com/rOtIFSKDDI
— RTÉ (@rte) April 12, 2021
https://twitter.com/iaeaorg/status/1381857054449659905
I welcome Japan's announcement on how it will dispose of the treated water stored at #Fukushima nuclear power plant. @IAEAorg will work w/ 🇯🇵 before, during & after the discharge of the water to help ensure this is carried out without an adverse impact on health & environment.1/2 pic.twitter.com/qLJxrPXCje
— Rafael MarianoGrossi (@rafaelmgrossi) April 13, 2021
https://twitter.com/UN_SPExperts/status/1382716849733967873
The @iaeaorg says the Japanese decision to release contaminated seawater from Fukushima in a controlled discharge, "will help pave the way for continued progress" in decommissioning the nuclear plant. https://t.co/ksXZZy1KAr
— UN News (@UN_News_Centre) April 14, 2021
We thank Japan for its transparent efforts in its decision to dispose of the treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi site. We look forward to the Government of Japan's continued coordination with the @iaeaorg.
— Secretary Antony Blinken (@SecBlinken) April 13, 2021
https://twitter.com/SStapczynski/status/1382907225866313729
Deputy PM Aso challenged by China to drink treated Fukushima water https://t.co/6CTaNnVWqG
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) April 14, 2021
'Please drink' treated Fukushima water: China asks Japan's minister https://t.co/81dOYtn9tz
— The Mainichi (Japan Daily News) (@themainichi) April 14, 2021
#BREAKING: China skeptical about U.S. backing of Fukushima water releasehttps://t.co/Sz8chWNgUd pic.twitter.com/7uVqBJ6c7f
— Kyodo News | Japan (@kyodo_english) April 13, 2021
U.S. Alone in Backing Japan Fukushima Water Plan Ripped by China https://t.co/1Euz5a2fxe pic.twitter.com/rC1J2bwAic
— MSN (@MSN) April 13, 2021
S. Korea, China reaffirm opposition to Japan's Fukushima water release plan https://t.co/dbqPDjL448
— Yonhap News Agency (@YonhapNews) April 14, 2021
China asks Japan not to release Fukushima water without agreement #jakpost https://t.co/IfY7urNjW7
— The Jakarta Post (@jakpost) April 13, 2021
#NSTworld Beijing said the ocean was the "common property of mankind" and the disposal of the #nuclear waste water "is not just Japan's domestic issue."https://t.co/4ZoLcNw78E#Fukushima
— New Straits Times (@NST_Online) April 13, 2021
China warns it may take action if Japan dumps contaminated Fukushima water into sea https://t.co/jiKGWcIr0u pic.twitter.com/xEzPwrIUYr
— Mothership.sg (@MothershipSG) April 14, 2021
Japan faces toxic political fallout from China, Korea and Greenpeace over plan to dump Fukushima's radioactive water into the Pacific https://t.co/CHyFDJ3Mn6
— Asia Times (@asiatimesonline) April 13, 2021
“We will closely follow the development of the situation and assess possible threats posed to the safety of related food and agricultural products and their trade, to ensure the safety of Chinese consumers,” #world https://t.co/GYiRzNCR2S
— Edmonton Journal (@edmontonjournal) April 15, 2021
Russia joins China and South Korea in expressing 'serious concern' at Japan's plan to release waste water from the Fukushima nuclear disaster https://t.co/bgSVatFvSt
— Science Insider (@SciInsider) April 14, 2021
#FromTheSouth News Bits | China on Tuesday expressed great concern over Japan's decisions to dump radioactive water from the destroyed Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean. pic.twitter.com/ZLUsL4rOrH
— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) April 13, 2021
China tells Japan's deputy PM to drink a glass of treated Fukushima water to prove claim it is safe https://t.co/aei2h0umx4
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) April 15, 2021
Water release is to begin in around two years but is opposed by China, South Korea and Japan’s fishery industry https://t.co/xdOhK2TnFe
— Sunday Times (@SundayTimesZA) April 14, 2021
#Japan to release contaminated #Fukushima water into sea, in a move that has raised grave concern in the neighbouring countries. While China has denounced the plan as "extremely irresponsible", South Korea has sought international litigation.
Mohammed Saleh brings you the story pic.twitter.com/eSMJ8Owdll
— WION (@WIONews) April 15, 2021
Japan says it will dump more than a million tonnes of contaminated water from Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean, a decision that worries neighbouring countries and the local community pic.twitter.com/vYfnkArc1V
— TRT World (@trtworld) April 13, 2021
‘Highly irresponsible’: China, fishers blast Japan’s plan to release radioactive water https://t.co/POJXJWUiEQ
— Fast Company (@FastCompany) April 13, 2021
South Korea and China protest Japan’s decision to release radioactive water from Fukushima into the Pacific Ocean. “The ocean is not Japan’s trash can,” said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Zhao Lijian. CNBC’s @sam_vadas and @cherykang with more. pic.twitter.com/OsXirdtwSr
— CNBC International (@CNBCi) April 15, 2021
Japan's government has decided to start releasing treated radioactive water from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean in two years — an option fiercely opposed by fishermen, residents and Japan's neighbors. https://t.co/648VTNcF4s
— NBC News (@NBCNews) April 13, 2021
Japan said on Tuesday that it had decided to gradually release tons of treated wastewater from the ruined Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean. The disposal of the wastewater has been long delayed by public opposition and by safety concerns. https://t.co/eUB9tO8mbS
— The New York Times (@nytimes) April 13, 2021
Japan approves releasing Fukushima water into ocean https://t.co/mO59lVhr7f
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) April 13, 2021
Japan says it will release more than a million tonnes of contaminated water from the Fukushima nuclear power station back into the sea, drawing condemnation from China, South Korea and the local fishing industry. Read more: https://t.co/GtCQ6zRlCL pic.twitter.com/960Bu6PRaq
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) April 13, 2021
Japan plans to release over 1 million tonnes of contaminated Fukushima water into sea.
Its government pledges to make water safe using a several years-long process despite likely concerns from nearby countries and environmentalists https://t.co/EVGZiocPAz pic.twitter.com/0d9gvyCQbs
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) April 13, 2021
ツイッター上で時々見かけるこの図は正確なのでしょうか?おそらく正確なのでしょうから、英語情報として最初から準備しておくべきです。
Daiichi takes mRNA COVID-19 vaccine into clinic as Japanese R&D belatedly fires up https://t.co/xLMBjpfAWD pic.twitter.com/cr7dB4zXA0
— BioCalifornia (@BioCalifornia) March 22, 2021
Daiichi Sankyo begins trial for mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in Japanhttps://t.co/ueQkL51iJh#COVID19 #vaccine pic.twitter.com/5hGJ98dEmt
— Pharmafocus (@Pharmafocus) March 22, 2021
Daiichi Sankyo's COVID-19 vaccine candidate selected by Japanese drug discovery body https://t.co/WG5rnwTBKR
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) August 31, 2020
#Daiichi Sankyo Co. said Monday that it has started a clinical trial in Japan for a #COVID19 vaccine being developed jointly with the University of Tokyo.https://t.co/Tp59MJ0O6Z pic.twitter.com/rEcjm2lsId
— Arab News Japan (@ArabNewsjp) March 23, 2021
Sanofi pulls out of late-phase Daiichi vaccine collaboration https://t.co/fTUaDwLMEB
— Swedish Biotech (@BiotechSweden) August 4, 2020
The Japanese drugmaker is finding it difficult to conduct the final phase of the vaccine’s clinical trial, involving tens of thousands of participants worldwide, this year while COVID-19 vaccinations are being conducted around the world. https://t.co/uJhgot7nJN
— The Japan Times (@japantimes) March 17, 2021
Japan's Shionogi creating coronavirus vaccine using insects and aiming to start clinical trials this year.https://t.co/0A6omWzsbm
— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) April 28, 2020
Japan's Shionogi readies COVID-19 vaccine for December trial: CEO https://t.co/s34hbWAo57 pic.twitter.com/I8a3KenVet
— Reuters (@Reuters) October 29, 2020