(Source)
http://www.greenaction-japan.org
For immediate release: 27 June 2013
27 June 2013, Takahama Town, Fukui Prefecture, Japan—-A shipment of MOX
(mixed plutonium and uranium oxide) fuel arrived at Kepco’s Takahama
nuclear power plant today located in Fukui Prefecture facing the Japan
Sea.
Today’s shipment violates the Japan Atomic Energy Commission’s
determination, issued in 2003, requiring utilities to specify the
end-use of MOX fuel before it is imported.
Kepco has not been given permission to restart its Takahama nuclear
power plant. On top of that, the Japanese Nuclear Regulation Authority
(NRA) has not even established post-Fukushima accident regulatory
standards for MOX fuel and its use.
According to the IAEA, unirradiated MOX fuel is direct-use nuclear
weapons material. This shipment adds yet another 900kg (approx.) to the
already 960kg of unused plutonium in MOX fuel located at 5 nuclear power
plants in Japan.
As of today, over 70 nations have opposed MOX fuel shipments and
past shipments of separated plutonium. Japan, the UK, and France have
neglected to undertake an environmental impact assessment on Japanese
nuclear shipments. Furthermore, no compensation plan exists for damages
in the event of an accident, and emergency planning is grossly
inadequate.
Many Japanese prefectures are also on the shipment route. Citizens
of local governments which face the Japan Sea have petitioned Kepco and
the Japanese government for information on emergency planning and
compensation for damages in the event of such an accident.
On 26 June, the Joint Action for Nuclear Free Korea composed of 78
groups including the nationwide Korean Federation of Environmental
Movement (KFEM) issued a statement opposing the MOX shipment.
“"Crucial quality control data for the MOX fuel has not been
released by the fabricator of the fuel, the French company Areva SA. Not
even Kepco, its client, has been given details on the kind of
impurities in the fuel and other important data that could affect the
fuel safety. The French nuclear authority’s remit does not include
checking the quality of foreign fuel. Therefore, only Areva is privy to
that information” stated Aileen Mioko Smith, executive director of Green
Action.
———
References:
12, April 2013
Joint letter to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry regarding MOX fuel shipment to Japan
http://www.greenaction-japan.org/internal/130412_MOX_US_State_Letter.pdf
5 March 2013
Letters sent to countries potentially on the route of the MOX fuel shipment
http://www.greenaction-japan.org/internal/130305_Letter_en_route_MOX.pdf
Download: MOX (mixed plutonium uranium) Fuel Shipment Arrives in Japan with No End-Use Determined (PDF)
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