The Borneo Post

Tepco may mothball reactors at world’s biggest nuke plant

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TOKYO: Tokyo Electric Power said yesterday it may start to decommissi­on at least one nuclear reactor at its Kashiwazak­i-Kariwa power plant, the world’s biggest nuclear plant by capacity, within five years of restarting two of the reactors at the site.

Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) President Tomoaki Kobayakawa made the decommissi­oning comments in a statement outlining its response to a request for plans on the station’s future by the government of the city of Kashiwazak­i in Niigata prefecture, where the plant is located.

In 2017, Tepco received initial regulatory approval from the Japanese government to restart the No 6 and No 7 reactors at Kashiwazak­i-Kariwa, each with a capacity of 1,356 megawatts (MW).

The plant site has seven reactors with a total capacity of 8,212 MW, equal to 20 per cent of Japan’s nuclear capacity.

The facility is Tepco’s last remaining nuclear plant after it announced plans to shut its Fukushima Daini station, nearby the Fukushima Daichi station where a massive earthquake and tsunami caused the meltdown of three of the site’s reactors in 2011.

Kashiwazak­i’s Mayor Masahiro Sakurai demanded in 2017 that Tepco submit plans to shut at least one of the No 1 to No 5 reactors in return for approval of the restart of reactors No 6 and No 7, a city official told Reuters by phone yesterday.

The Kashiwazak­i Mayor will take about a month to evaluate Tepco’s plan, the official said.

Tepco said on Friday that Kobayakawa would brief local officials on Monday about its answers to the city’s request.

Tepco may take steps to decommissi­on more than one of the No 1 to No 5 reactors within 5 years after the restart of the No.6 and No 7 reactors if its is confident it can secure enough non-fossil fuel energy sources, according to the statement.

A Tepco official said yesterday the company is targeting having renewable and nuclear power produce 44 per cent of total generation by 2030.

Tepco has been trying to convince local authoritie­s near Kashiwazak­i-Kariwa, who have sign-off rights on nuclear restarts, that it has overcome operationa­l failings revealed at Fukushima.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? People affected by clashes between the military and ethnic rebel groups wait to receive supplies from local civil society organisati­ons in Man Lwal village, outside Kutkai in Shan State.
— AFP photo People affected by clashes between the military and ethnic rebel groups wait to receive supplies from local civil society organisati­ons in Man Lwal village, outside Kutkai in Shan State.

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