The Borneo Post

Japanese regulator approves restart of first nuclear reactors

-

Japan’s nuclear regulator gave the go- ahead yesterday for the restart of a nuclear power station, the first step to reopening an industry that was mothballed after the Fukushima disaster and which may involve the definitive closure of a dozen old plants.

The Nuclear Regulation Authority ( NRA) said Kyushu Electric Power’s two-reactor Sendai plant in southweste­rn Japan could restart, although that still needs the approval of local authoritie­s.

Japan is nearing the end of its first full year without nuclear power since 1966 and public mistrust of the sector remains high after the 2011 Fukushima disaster, the worst since Chernobyl in 1986.

The government is pressing regulators to make the tough decision on whether to decommissi­on the oldest of the country’s 48 reactors, which face higher safety hurdles than the rest. Weeding out reactors that are 40 years old or more may help win public trust in the rest of the industry.

“For myself, I would like to proceed with smooth decommissi­oning (of some plants) and at the same time the restart of nuclear power stations certified as safe,” Yuko Obuchi, the new minister for economy, trade and industry, who oversees the nuclear industry, said last week.

The government has been pressing for the restart of reactors that receive safety approval from the NRA to reduce Japan’s reliance on expensive imported fuel.

The push for a reckoning on some plants is “clearly part of the strategy by the government and utilities to send a signal to the people of Japan that they are listening and taking into account the lessons of Fukushima”, said prominent nuclear-power critic Arnie Gundersen, director of Fairewinds Energy Education.

“But it also reflects the challenge faced by utilities in finding the funds to bring older reactors to a standard that can pass NRA approval,” Gunderson, a veteran U.S. nuclear engineer who turned against nuclear energy for safety reasons, said by email.

Under post-Fukushima rules, reactors are supposed to be decommissi­oned after 40 years. They can receive a 20-year extension but that is subject to more rigorous and costly safety regulation­s.

As many as two-thirds of Japan’s 48 idled nuclear units may never return to operation because of the high costs, local opposition or seismic risks, while one-third will probably come back online eventually, a Reuters analysis showed this year.

 ??  ?? Anti-nuclear demonstrat­ors stage a rally in front of the Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NRA) in Tokyo. — AFP photo
Anti-nuclear demonstrat­ors stage a rally in front of the Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NRA) in Tokyo. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia