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Philippines and Fish

PalawOne

G'day all


We are currently feeding a virtual army (12+) of building and construction workers on our property on Palawan.


Our local price for local seafood (everyone's favorite) is now 180 peso per meal, each, let alone maybe chicken.   


Now, seems maybe we should be happy it's still available?


"Nuclear Signatures Detected In West Philippine Sea"


By Bella Cariaso  January 18, 2026 https://www.onenews.ph/articles/nuclear-signatures-detected-in-west-philippine-sea


Scientists have detected elevated levels of iodine-129 – an isotope commonly used as an indicator of nuclear activity – in seawater samples from the West Philippine Sea (WPS).


In a research published this month, the researchers said the concentrations found in the WPS were higher than in any other part of the country, despite the Philippines having no active nuclear power plant or nuclear weapons program.


The findings are based on an analysis of 119 seawater samples collected from the WPS, the Philippine Rise, the Sulu Sea and other areas across the archipelago.


Researchers found iodine-129 levels in the WPS to be about 1.5 to 1.7 times higher than those recorded in other sampling sites.


The study was conducted by experts from the Department of Science and Technology-Philippine Nuclear Research Institute, UP MSI’s Geological Oceanography Laboratory and the University of Tokyo.


The team traced the likely source of the isotope to the Yellow Sea.


The researchers said the results were consistent with recent Chinese studies linking iodine-129 in the Yellow Sea to decades-old nuclear weapons tests and nuclear fuel reprocessing facilities in Europe, which released the isotope into soils and rivers in northeastern China.


The study added that iodine-129 may have reached Philippine waters through ocean circulation systems, particularly the Yellow Sea Coastal Current and the Chinese Coastal Current, though further oceanographic modeling is needed to confirm the transport pathways.


While iodine-129 is radioactive, the researchers said its current levels in the WPS pose no threat to human health or the environment.


They also underscored the need to strengthen monitoring and regulation of radioactive materials, especially those that cross national boundaries.


The research was funded by the DOST-National Research Council of the Philippines and the DOST-Philippine Council for Agriculture and Resources Research and Development.


While iodine-129 is radioactive, the researchers said its current levels in the WPS pose no threat to human health or the environment.

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bigpearl

Interesting P1, we had 12 to 14 workers here for a year and supplied them lunch, morning and afternoon snacks and was nothing like that, maybe P800 to 1K per day all up. The boys rotated the cooking amongst themselves and was never a problem because they were in a large undercover kitchen out of the sun. mostly pork, chicken, veggies and copious amounts of rice, seafoods were Saturdays which the better half usually cooked for them including prawns and mussels


All that aside do you ever know what you are eating when it comes to proteins and vegetables unless you grow them all yourself?


OMO.


Cheers, Steve.

vehicross100

We’re at 500-600 daily for a crew of 5, Six day’s a week.

They go home for 1.5hr Lunch.

Above is just for the two daily, 30 minute snack breaks. So monthly we budget

14-15K for snacks.