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The environment ministry has issued recommendations on the disposal of asbestos-containing building materials, but it's unclear if they're being enforced. It also conducted air monitoring in 15 locations in Fukushima, Ibaraki and Miyagi prefectures earlier this month, said Hisao Yamaguchi, an environment ministry official. The results will not be out until at least next month. "We have experience from the past, so we do believe that this time, similar issues with asbestos will emerge," he said. "Public awareness of asbestos is also much higher now." "At the Ministry of Environment, we want to act as quickly as possible," Yamaguchi said. The health ministry said Wednesday it has issued pamphlets outlining safety guidelines and distributed 90,000 masks in the hardest-hit prefectures. In the Miyagi prefecture town of Minami-Sanriku, Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko visited a gymnasium where 200 evacuees live, offering encouragement to residents who lost homes and loved ones. "I'm thankful he has come so far. It makes me so happy," said Mitsuko Oikawa, 73, who has been living at the shelter since the tsunami. Her house was washed away by the powerful waves, she said, shaking her head. The asbestos risks in the tsunami wreckage are why Tokyo-based EFA Laboratories Co. decided to offer free asbestos testing and analysis to emergency workers and residents. "If we can help them identify asbestos fibers and protect them to the greatest extent possible, I'm a happy guy," said Kevin Carroll, EFA's president. During a tour around the Sendai area last week, EFA asbestos analyst Eric Eguina took debris samples from a half dozen locations to test at a mobile laboratory. "I hope to find nothing, but I know it's there," said Eguina. Results given to The Associated Press confirmed asbestos fibers in a majority of the samples. EFA also collected air samples around Sendai earlier this month. In one spot near a collapsed building that included asbestos, air testing showed an elevated density of 2 fibers per liter. The figure is lower than Japan's environmental safety standard of 10 fibers per liter, but that was before the cleanup work began shifting the rubble, which inevitably raises levels. The owner of a nearby ironworks company that was washed away by the tsunami said he was surprised by the asbestos reading but wasn't too worried. "We all die of something someday," Kisaburo Watanabe said. "I've been in manufacturing my entire life and have been around all sorts of toxins, including asbestos."
[Associated
Press;
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