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Monday, 26 March 2012
Japan’s Tepco shuts its last reactor, power risks loom
TOKYO: Tokyo Electric
Power Co, the operator of
the tsunami-crippled Fukushima
power plant, shut its
last operating nuclear reactor
today for regular maintenance,
leaving just one
running reactor supplying
Japan’s creaking power sector.
Japan has 54 reactors, but
since the tsunami last March
triggered the world’s worst
nuclear crisis in 25 years at
the Fukushima plant, it has
been unable to restart any
reactors that have undergone
maintenance due to
public safety concerns.
Tepco said it shutdown
the No.6 reactor at its
Kashiwazaki Kariwa plant,
the world’s biggest nuclear
power plant, raising concerns
about a power crunch
this summer when electricity
demand peaks due to hot
weather.
‘We are likely to be able
to provide stable electricity
supply at the moment, but
we would like to ask customers
to continue conserving
power,’ Tepco President
Toshio Nishizawa said in a
statement released on Sunday.
‘We are currently
closely studying the summer
power supply situation. We
will do our utmost to operate
in a stable way and maintain
our facilities,’ he added.
Out of the 17 reactors
owned by Tepco, which provides
electricity to some 45
million people in the Tokyo
area, all six at its devastated
Fukushima Daiichi plant,
240 km (150 miles) northeast
of Tokyo, are off line, as
well as four at its neighbouring
Fukushima Daini plant.
At its Kashiwazaki Kariwa
plant, 230 km northwest
of Tokyo, three remain
offl ine after a magnitude 6.8
earthquake struck the area
in July 2007 and small fi res
followed. Four others are
under maintenance. Japan’s
last running reactor,
Hokkaido Electric’s Tomari
No.3, is set to go off line
on May 5 for maintenance.
Greenpeace Japan’s Executive
Director Junichi Sato
said that the country could
survive without rushing to
restart its nuclear sector.
‘Japan is practically nuclear
free, and the impact
on daily life is invisible,’
Sato said in a statement
‘With proper demand management,
energy effi ciency
measures, and more than
suffi cient backup generation
in place, there is no excuse
for shortages in the coming
months, and absolutely no
need to rush restarts of nuclear
plants.’ To avoid blackouts,
utilities have restarted
old fossil fuel plants and
have called for power conservation,
but some analysts
warn of power shortages in
the summer, especially given
ageing fossil fuel plants
could be less reliable.
The process to restart halted
reactors is unclear. Japan’s
nuclear safety watchdog and
another experts’ panel are
currently reviewing stress
test results submitted by
utilities that gauge how reactors
can withstand extreme
events like a huge tsunami.
Once they give approval,
ministers including Prime
Minister Yoshihiko Noda
can give the green-light for
the restarts, but only after
they deem there is enough
local and public support, and
surveys show this may not
be easy.
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