San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

TWO REMOTE JAPAN TOWNS SEEK TO HOST NUCLEAR WASTE STORAGE SITE

- BY MARI YAMAGUCHI Yamaguchi writes for The Associated Press.

Two remote towns in northern Japan struggling with rapidly graying and shrinking population­s signed up Friday to possibly host a high-level radioactiv­e waste storage site as a means of economic survival.

Japanese utilities have about 16,000 tons of highly radioactiv­e spent fuel rods stored in cooling pools or other interim sites, and there is no final repository for them in Japan — a situation called “a mansion without a toilet.”

Japan is in a dire situation following the virtual failure of an ambitious nuclear fuel recycling plan, in which plutonium extracted from spent fuel was to be used in still-unbuilt fast breeder reactors. The problem of accumulati­ng nuclear waste came to the fore after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster. Finding a community willing to host a radioactiv­e dump site is difficult, even with a raft of financial enticement­s.

On Friday, Haruo Kataoka, the mayor of Suttsu town on the northweste­rn coast of Hokkaido, applied in Tokyo for preliminar­y government research on whether its land would be suitable for highly radioactiv­e waste storage for thousands of years.

Later Friday in Kamoenai just north of Suttsu, village chief Masayuki Takahashi announced his decision to also apply for an initial feasibilit­y study.

Suttsu, with a population of 2,900, and Kamoenai, with about 800 people, have received annual government subsidies as hosts of the Tomari nuclear power plant. But they are struggling financiall­y because of a declining fishing industry and their aging and shrinking population­s.

The preliminar­y research is the first of three steps in selecting a permanent disposal site, with the whole process estimated to take about two decades. Municipali­ties can receive up to 2 billion yen ($19 million) in government subsidies for two years by participat­ing in the first stage. Moving on to the next stage would bring in more subsidies.

“I have tried to tackle the problems of declining population, low birth rates and social welfare, but hardly made progress,” Takahashi told reporters. “I hope that accepting research (into the waste storage) can help the village’s developmen­t.”

It is unknown whether either place will qualify as a disposal site. Opposition from people across Hokkaido could also hinder the process. A gasoline bomb was thrown into the Suttsu mayor’s home early Thursday, possibly by an opponent of the plan, causing slight damage.

Hokkaido Gov. Naomichi Suzuki and local fisheries groups are opposed to hosting such a facility.

One mayor in southweste­rn Japan expressed interest in 2007, but faced massive opposition and the plan was spiked.

High-level radioactiv­e waste must be stored in thick concrete structures at least 300 yards undergroun­d so it won’t affect humans and the environmen­t.

A 2017 land survey map released by the government indicated parts of Suttsu and Kamoenai could be suitable for a final repository.

 ?? KYODO NEWS VIA AP ?? Kamoenai village chief Masayuki Takahashi hopes hosting nuclear waste will help his community.
KYODO NEWS VIA AP Kamoenai village chief Masayuki Takahashi hopes hosting nuclear waste will help his community.

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