1. Elon Musk推特:
After Fukushima, to support Japan, I personally visited the area and ate locally grown food to prove that there was no nuclear danger.
I also donated a small solar system.*****KxUgJIsvo4
2. 根据Grok:
In July 2011 (about four months after the March 11, 2011 earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear accident at Fukushima Daiichi), he traveled to Soma City in Fukushima Prefecture (roughly 40 km from the plant). Through the Musk Foundation, he donated $250,000 to fund a solar power system that would provide clean, renewable electricity to a city water treatment facility (or similar public facility) in a tsunami-devastated area. SolarCity (the company Musk chaired at the time, later acquired by Tesla) contributed labor, management, and expertise at no cost to the city, with Japanese-made high-efficiency panels installed locally.
He attended a public ceremony at the site, met with Soma Mayor Hidekiyo Tachiya (there are photos of them shaking hands in front of the solar panels), and the visit was partly intended to demonstrate that the region was safe to visit and support recovery efforts. Musk also ate locally grown produce there to highlight that radiation risks were lower than widely feared.
After Fukushima, to support Japan, I personally visited the area and ate locally grown food to prove that there was no nuclear danger.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 30, 2026
I also donated a small solar system.*****KxUgJIsvo4