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TEPCO applies to restart Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear plant

Mr Izumida, a strident critic of TEPCO, said he was allowing the utility to apply for safety approval, but withholding final judgment on restarting the plant.

“Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant may be halted, but it is a living facility, and safety must be ensured at the plant,” he said in a statement.

He had previously denounced TEPCO as unfit to run a nuclear plant and has called for the company’s liquidation.

exclamation-flag-japanFukushima operator TEPCO seeks restart of Japan’s Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear plant http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-27/fukushima-operator-seeks-reactor-restart/4985444  27 Sept 13   TEPCO has applied to restart a nuclear plant in north-western Japan, an initial step on its planned recovery from the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

But final approval to resume power generation at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa facility, the world’s largest nuclear plant, 300 kilometres north west of Tokyo, is uncertain and any decision would take many months at best.

All of Japan’s 50 reactors were shut down after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima plant, triggering a nuclear crisis and a spike in popular opposition to the industry.

Two units were brought back on line last year, but recent shutdowns have left Japan without nuclear power for only the third time since 1970.

The return to government last year of prime minister Shinzo Abe, a proponent of nuclear power who says Fukushima is “under control”, has given rise to suggestions that idled reactors may be restarted under new safety guidelines. The process is expected to take well into next year. After winning approval from a previously reluctant local governor in Niigata prefecture, where the Kashiwazaki Kariwa facility is located, TEPCO applied on Friday to Japan’s nuclear regulator for permission to restart two of the plant’s seven reactors.

Japan’s government, though, is keeping up the pressure on TEPCO to improve safety.

“Nothing is more important than safety and getting the understanding of the local people,” trade and industry minister Toshimitsu Motegi told TEPCO president Naomi Hirose.

“I want you to continue making efforts to improve safety.”
Mr Hirose said TEPCO’s application to the independent atomic regulator was just the beginning of the process, and it would work with local authorities on safety measures.

Earlier this week, Mr Hirose told Niigata governor Hirohiko Izumida that TEPCO would improve safety by attaching an additional filter vent to ease pressure inside containment vessels if an emergency arose.

Mr Izumida, a strident critic of TEPCO, said he was allowing the utility to apply for safety approval, but withholding final judgment on restarting the plant.

“Kashiwazaki Kariwa nuclear power plant may be halted, but it is a living facility, and safety must be ensured at the plant,” he said in a statement.

He had previously denounced TEPCO as unfit to run a nuclear plant and has called for the company’s liquidation.

The utility has had to acknowledge that radioactive water has been leaking into the nearby Pacific Ocean from its Fukushima plant, practically since the disaster.

September 28, 2013 - Posted by | business and costs, Japan, politics

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