“A series of mishaps comes at an awkward time for the government the Economist” 20/4/13
In February this year, Shinzo Abe, leader of the then incoming Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), said the new government would restart reactors after they passed a forthcoming set of new safety tests. The country’s “nuclear village”, a cosy bunch from industry and government, cheered. But now the stricken Fukushima Dai-ichi plant is starting to alarm the public once more. On April 15th the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), a UN body, flew in to investigate a series of dangerous incidents.A power outage in March left four underground pools that store thousands of the plant’s nuclear fuel rods without fresh cooling water for several hours. A rat, it later emerged, had gnawed through a cable. Workmen laying down rat-proof netting caused another outage. Then this month regulators discovered that thousands of gallons of radioactive water had seeped into the ground; the plant’s operator had installed a jerry-rigged system of plastic sheeting, which sprang leaks. The quantity of contaminated water has become a crisis in its own right, the manager has admitted. And now the pipes used to transfer water to safer storage containers are leaking too.
All
this will further darken the public’s view of nuclear power, says Hideyuki Ban,
secretary general of the Citizens’ Nuclear Information Centre in Tokyo, an Experts
who examined the causes of the 2011 catastrophe reckon the LDP has paid too
little attention to what went wrong. Kiyoshi Kurokawa, the chairman of a
parliamentary investigation, says the country may be moving “too hastily back
towards nuclear power, without fully regaining the trust of the Japanese public
and the international community”. Yoichi Funabashi, a former editor of Asahi Shimbun newspaper who
headed a private-sector investigation, says it is unfortunate that the 2012
election, which brought the LDP back to office, did not include a proper debate
about the future of nuclear energy……
A
nationwide poll in February found that around 70% of respondents wanted either
to phase out all the plants, or to shut them down immediately. Opposition is
likely to be strongest at the local level, as regions move to switch their
reactors back on. This week an Osaka court ruled on a suit brought by local
residents to have Japan’s only two operating reactors, at the Oi plant in Fukui
prefecture, shut down. They lost, but their suit looks like only the first of
many battles.
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