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恐竜に会いに行く by 河太郎一座 – Radioactive Japan: Once TEPCO, Always TEPCO, Even for Female Emloyees

Monday, March 25, 2013

Kimura Komako in New York City studying
methods of American women suffragists.
1917-1918

Image source : http://www.womeninworldhistory.com/TWR-13.html

http://ex-skf.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/radioactive-japan-once-tepco-always.html

Japan is the number one country in the world where nearly 90% of the citizens believe in anthropogenic global warming. 54 nuclear reactors in Japan have been justified as carbon-free “clean” energy to help fight the global warming.

The truth is that nuclear energy has been pushed by the electric power companies because it fattens their bottom lines thanks to the accounting allowed by the national government. No matter how much the nuclear power generation costs, the power companies are allowed to fully transfer that cost to the consumers (mostly retail, household customers) and add a fixed percentage of that cost as their profit. In other words, bigger the cost, bigger the profit.

But nuclear energy was actually not needed to meet the demand in the beginning of this century, as the economy was still in doldrums after the massive real estate bubble burst and people had other sources for heating and cooking (natural gas, heating oil). So what did the power companies and the national government come up with?

A coordinated push to increase electricity consumption by launching a campaign of “all-electric lifestyle”. It suddenly became “cool and sophisticated” to heat the house using electricity, cook with electricity. Electricity consumption skyrocketed in large cities like Tokyo, justifying more nuclear reactors to meet the newly created “demand” in a country with declining population and the economy that was going nowhere.

At the same time, TEPCO, for one, was busy educating the impressionable mothers, selling them the story of global warming and how they could help save the planet by going clean electric.

The company didn’t do it themselves, of course. It used a subcontractor.

Mainichi English (3/25/2013):

‘Housewives’ educating children on energy linked to TEPCO PR firm

A puppet theater troupe advertising itself on its website as “started by a group of housewives concerned about energy” was in fact founded by staff from Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO)’s PR firm, the Mainichi has learned.

According to the website of the puppet theater troupe in question — Kappa no Kawataro Ichiza — in 2000 a group of housewives set up an online “energy club” to exchange their views on energy after taking their “children to visit a nuclear power plant and discovering the great efforts being taken to supply energy to private households.”

The puppet troupe was launched after club members decided they “wanted to pass on the importance of energy to (their) children,” the website continues. In 2002, the troupe was certified as the Japan Industrial Location Center (JILC)’s “energy theater caravan nonprofit organization project.”

According to a leading member of the group, however, all five members of the troupe belong to a research firm doing publicity work for TEPCO. Their PR work involves holding parties at their homes for fellow housewives and informing participants of the necessity of nuclear power. One troupe member threw approximately 300 such parties at her home.

Upon hearing from participants at the parties that they wanted their children to learn the same information, the group responded to a JILC call for theater troupes to educate young children about energy. Group members said they made a presentation at the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy — which commissioned the JILC competition — before the public competition, and were promised assistance on the spot. The members did not explain, however, whether they went to the agency on their own initiative or were encouraged by another party to do so.

One puppet show plot entails “kappa,” a creature from Japanese folklore, receiving a letter from a polar bear asking for help. The kappa set out to find that melting ice has separated a baby polar bear from its mother. While the mother and cub are reunited, the kappa are dumbfounded to hear about global warming. Another of the group’s shows features a trip to the Edo period (1603-1868) in a time machine to get a glimpse of life without electricity and an understanding of how convenient life has become because of it.

Through 2005, the troupe received up to 2.5 million yen a year in assistance as part of the agency and JILC program, performing at schools in areas hosting nuclear power stations, and at events in the Tokyo metropolitan area. Each member received 7,000 yen per performance. After financial assistance subsequently plummeted to 600,000 yen per year, however, the group chose to cut off its affiliation with the project. Since the March 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake, the troupe has performed for children at the request of the Atomuseum in Niigata Prefecture.

The members admit to some feelings of discomfort with their dealings with TEPCO PR officials.

“TEPCO employees sometimes come to our parties for training, but they say they want us to keep their presence a secret form the people we’ve invited,” one member said. “There are things (TEPCO) won’t tell even us.”

Now they say they are uncomfortable, after being busted by Mainichi. They also quickly took down their website (here’s a cache). They took down the youtube videos on their channel, but here’s one copied by a user – “Kappa meets dinosaur”:

恐竜に会いに行く by 河太郎一座

 

Uploaded on 15 Aug 2010

人形劇でエネルギーを学ぼう!…の公演の一部です。

😦

 

March 26, 2013 - Posted by | Uncategorized

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