Saturday 14 April 2012

Restart of Oi reactor criticised

"The governor of Fukushima Prefecture has lashed out at the central government's handling of the proposed restart of the Oi nuclear reactors in Fukui Prefecture."

-- Something important to note here is that thanks to the Fukushima accident, nuclear power is turning into an issue that creates rifts between the central government and local governments (such rifts until now have largely been confined to that between Okinawa Prefecture and the national government over US military bases).

It'll be interesting to see how the fear of blackouts and the fear of nuclear disaster weigh against each other in the near future. Corporations have put the government on notice that they are prepared to relocate overseas if there isn't sufficient electric power (apparently they haven't noticed that there's hardly a country on the planet without electric power problems). That threat has the government running scared. -


- Rice Farmer


Fukushima governor rips restart of Oi nuclear reactors
The governor of Fukushima Prefecture has lashed out at the central government's handling of the proposed restart of the Oi nuclear reactors in Fukui Prefecture.


13 April, 2012

As the governor of a disaster-stricken prefecture, I think the central government’s discussion of the restart of a nuclear power plant based on political considerations is unacceptable,” Yuhei Sato said on April 12.

Fukushima Prefecture hosts the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant.

I wonder if they really understand the severity and the reality of a nuclear power plant accident,” Sato said.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda’s administration initially planned to resume operations at the Oi plant’s No. 3 and No. 4 reactors, operated by Kansai Electric Power Co., in April.

However, it has since put off deciding whether to approve the utility’s safety measures regarding the suspended reactors.

Pointing to the continuing investigation by a government committee, he said, “It is questionable to discuss the resumption of reactor operations before the investigation is completed.”

He also referred to the delay in the establishment of a new nuclear regulatory agency and raised questions about “a pro-nuclear organization and its regulatory body being under the same roof.”

The new agency’s predecessor, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), is part of the industry ministry, which has been actively promoting the use of nuclear power.

I hope the government will take measures that make safety the first priority,” Sato said.

Meanwhile, the governors of Kyoto and Shiga prefectures, which border Fukui Prefecture, expressed their reluctance to approve the restart of the two reactors at the Oi nuclear plant.

Kyoto Governor Keiji Yamada and Shiga Governor Yukiko Kada on April 12 inspected the No. 3 and No. 4 reactors at the Oi plant, which had suspended operations for regular check-ups.

The government should be cautious about resuming operations while only stopgap measures are in place since it has been tasked to come up with permanent safety measures,” Yamada told media representatives after the inspection.

Kada cited the establishment of the new nuclear regulatory agency and detailed explanations on the urgency of electricity shortages as preconditions for restarting the Oi reactors.

I do not believe a nuclear accident on the scale of what happened in Fukushima can be avoided solely with these countermeasures in place," said Kada. "The influence of the earthquake on the Fukushima nuclear plant accident has yet to be fully clarified.”


Meanwhile, from the Japanese government..




Gov't says it is safe to restart two nuclear reactors at Oi plant

14 April, 2012

The government on Friday confirmed it was safe to restart two offline nuclear reactors in the wake of last year’s earthquake and tsunami disaster as the country faces a summer of power shortages

For article GO HERE

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.