Fukushima Soil Transplants: Japan Prime Minister’s Gardens Gain Nuclear Glow

Fukushima soil arrives in the Japan prime minister’s gardens, transforming ordinary flower beds into a radioactive showcase. The 2,000 tons of nuclear disaster earth create a surreal PR move, with glowing plants and official optimism overshadowed by public unease.
Not content with typical tulips, the prime minister’s office now cultivates blooms in Fukushima soil, a nuclear legacy. Officials insist radiation levels are safe, but the garden’s atomic makeover stirs both skepticism and fascination—imagine chrysanthemums with a radioactive pedigree.
Japan’s government relocated 2,000 tons of Fukushima soil for this official garden experiment.