The Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has been scrambling to find a way to contain radiation leaking from the Fukushima site. Efforts to create a barrier around the power plant by freezing the soil have been a total failure. Perhaps TEPCO can taken a lesson from Buddhist monk, Koyu Abe, who has instigated the planting of millions of sunflowers to absorb radiation from the power plant.
Koyu Abe launched a project called “Make a Wish Upon Flowers” in May. He stated that volunteers are acting to revive the area through the power of flower, giving the phrase flower power a whole new meaning.(1)