Radioactivity in the marine environment

The most significant human-made source of radiation in the Irish marine environment is low-level liquid radioactive waste discharged from the Sellafield site on the north-west coast of England.  For this reason, the EPA’s marine monitoring programme is focused on the east coast of Ireland.  

An image taken from the beach, pointing at the sea with the sun setting in the middle of the sky

 

EPA marine monitoring programme

The EPA marine monitoring programme involves the collection of seawater, seaweed, sediment, fish and shellfish from around the coast of Ireland.  These samples are analysed for a variety of radionuclides in the EPA’s Radiation Monitoring laboratory in Dublin.  

The following table shows the current sampling locations, samples types and radionuclides measured.

Location Frequency Sample Types Radionuclides Measured
Carlingford

Quarterly

 

Annually

Mussels, oysters

 

Winkles
Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides.  Tc-99, Pu-238, Pu-239, 240 and Am-241 (annual composite sample)
Ballagan/ Greenore Bimonthly

Seawater

 

Sediment, Seaweed

Cs-137

 

Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides.  Tc-99 (seaweed only)
Clogherhead Quarterly Fish, prawns, lobster Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides.  Tc-99, Pu-238, Pu-239, 240 and Am-241 (annual composite sample)
Kilmore Quay Annually Fish Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides  
Killybegs Annually Fish

 

Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides
Woodstown Biennially  

Seawater

 

Seaweed, sediment

Cs-137

 

Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides
Galway Biennially

 

Seawater

 

Seaweed, sediment

Cs-137

 

Cs-137, K-40 and other gamma emitting radionuclides

 

Offshore seawater samples are also collected annually by the Naval Service at six sites in the Irish Sea and analysed by the EPA for Cs-137.

What does the data tell us?


The EPA’s marine monitoring programme shows that radionuclide concentrations from human-made sources are very low.  Levels of human-made radiation in the Irish Sea have decreased steadily since the 1990s in line with decreased discharges from Sellafield.

The radiation dose from human-made radioactivity to a member of the Irish public from consuming large amounts of seafood is significantly lower than that from natural radioactivity (such as polonium-210 and lead-210) and is much less than 1% of the total radiation dose received from all sources of radiation (both natural and human-made).


Results from our marine monitoring programme are available to download below.

Radioactivity in seawater

Radioactivity in biota