The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tepco to submit decommissi­oning plan regarding five reactors

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Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) will submit to a municipal official on Monday a plan regarding the decommissi­oning of five reactors at its Kashiwazak­iKariwa nuclear station, the world’s biggest atomic plant, Jiji Press said.

Japan suffered its worst energy crisis since the war after a March 2011 quake and tsunami led to a three-reactor meltdown at the Fukushima site, spewing radiation that forced 160,000 people to flee.

The plan to be submitted on Monday could take to 26 the units set to be decommissi­oned by Japanese nuclear operators, or nearly half their pre-disaster fleet, while Tepco will be left with two of its 17 units before the Fukushima disaster.

Nuclear power met about 30 per cent of Japan’s electricit­y requiremen­ts before the March 2011 tsunami, but the eventual shutdown of all its reactors forced record imports of thermal coal and liquefied natural gas to replace the lost capacity.

Tepco’s president will meet authoritie­s in the city of Kashiwazak­i-Kariwa in Niigata prefecture, where the station is located, to explain the utility’s response to a request to mothball the five reactors, spokeswoma­n Emi Iwasa told Reuters by telephone.

Iwasa declined to provide any further comment.

Tepco has been trying to convince local authoritie­s, who have sign-off rights on restarts, that it has overcome operationa­l failings revealed at Fukushima and is competent to safely restart a reactor at Kashiwazak­iKariwa.

The plant, north-northwest of Tokyo, was damaged in an earthquake in 2007 that led to a small release of radiation and residents are wary of any restart.

Three of the reactors have been shut since the 2007 quake and the other four were idled in the months after the Fukushima disaster.

Two of Kashiwazak­i Kariwa’s reactors, the newest, have been won initial approval from regulators to restart, but prefectura­l authoritie­s are carrying out an inquiry into Tepco’s handling of Fukushima before they agree to any restart. — Reuters

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