The Star Malaysia

Extreme makeover

Fukushima gets an image overhaul after the worst nuclear meltdown in decades.

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FUKUshimA: Call it an extreme makeover. In Japan’s Fukushima, officials are attempting what might seem impossible, an image overhaul at the site of the worst nuclear meltdown in decades.

At the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, there’s a flashy new administra­tive building, debris has been moved and covered, and officials tout the “light” radioactiv­e security measures now possible.

“You see people moving around on foot, just in their uniforms. Before that was banned,” an official from the plant’s operator Tepco says.

“These cherry blossoms bloom in the spring,” he adds, gesturing to nearby foliage.

If it sounds like a hard sell, that might be because the task of rehabilita­ting the plant’s reputation is justifiabl­y Herculean.

In 2011, a massive earthquake triggered a devastatin­g tsunami that killed thousands and prompted the meltdown of several reactors.

It was the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl, and has had devastatin­g psychologi­cal and financial effects on the region.

But Tepco officials have been gradually trying to rebrand the plant, bringing in school groups, diplomats and other visitors, and touting a plan to attract 20,000 people a year by 2020, when Tokyo hosts the Summer Olympics.

Officials point out that protective gear is no longer needed in most of the plant, except for a small area, where some 3,000 to 4,000 workers are still decontamin­ating the facility.

Since May, visitors have been able to move around near the reactors on foot, rather than only in vehicles, and they can wear “very light equipment”, insists Tepco spokesman Kenji Abe. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Safety first: A Tepco staff member measuring radiation levels around storage tanks at the nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture. — AFP
Safety first: A Tepco staff member measuring radiation levels around storage tanks at the nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture. — AFP

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