4
on Japan nuclear safety team took utility money
Four
members of a Japanese government team that sets atomic reactor safety
standards received funding from utility companies or nuclear
manufacturers, raising questions about their neutrality in the wake
of last year's tsunami-triggered disaster.
ABC,
4
November, 2012
The
Nuclear Regulation Authority said Friday that Nagoya University
Professor Akio Yamamoto received 27.14 million yen ($339,000) over
the past three years for research on reactors. That included 6.28
million yen ($79,000) from a subsidiary of Tokyo Electric Power Co.,
the utility that runs the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant that
suffered meltdowns last year.
The
authority said three others on the six-member standards team received
industry funding. Getting such money is not illegal, but could call
the neutrality of the team into question, since the industry would
benefit from laxer standards.
The
commission had asked the team members to voluntarily disclose such
funding, including grants and donations, in an effort to boost
transparency.
Akira
Yamaguchi, a professor at Osaka University, received 10 million yen
($125,000) in such money, including 3 million yen from Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries, which makes nuclear plants.
Before,
nuclear regulators were in the same ministry that promotes the
industry. The Nuclear Regulation Authority was set up this year
following calls for a more independent watchdog, and after large and
frequent public protests against nuclear power.
The
Tokyo Shimbun newspaper reported Saturday that such funding indicates
a "danger the measures may turn spineless to reflect the
utilities' wishes."
The
chief of the Nuclear Regulation Authority, Shunichi Tanaka, also has
been under fire as possibly being too pro-nuclear. He was a key
member of a government panel promoting nuclear energy and headed
government research on the technology before being tapped for the
job.
Separately,
another team of experts working under the commission has been
examining earthquake faults at Ohi nuclear power plant, which houses
the only two reactors currently running in Japan.
A
decision is expected Sunday on whether Ohi will be shut down.
Japan's
48 other working nuclear reactors, besides the four ruined at
Fukushima Dai-ichi, have not been restarted after being shut down for
routine inspections.
The
two at Ohi went back on line in July. Before the Fukushima disaster,
nuclear power had provided about 30 percent of Japan's electricity.
Ruling party legislator Goshi Hosono, the former minister overseeing
the disaster, said Saturday that more tests may be needed to check
the earthquake faults, but even "a gray zone" of
uncertainty would likely mean the Ohi reactors would go offline.
Japan
is promising to develop renewable energy such as solar and wind
power, but such a shift would take time. The cost of oil and gas
imports has hurt the world's third largest economy as it recovers
from last year's earthquake and tsunami.
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