Japan nuclear operators ask to restart reactors

Updated 09 July 2013
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Japan nuclear operators ask to restart reactors

TOKYO: Japanese power companies yesterday asked for permission to restart 10 nuclear reactors, a move that could presage a widespread return to atomic energy more than two years after the Fukushima disaster.
The firms submitted applications to regulators for safety assessments on units at five separate plants on the day that new beefed-up rules came into force.
The requests are the first step on a journey that could take many months, but which commentators say is likely to result in the resumption of nuclear power generation in Japan.
All but two of the country’s 50 nuclear reactors are offline, shut down for safety checks after the Fukushima disaster, the worst the world has seen since Chernobyl in 1986.
If the regulator gives the green light, the companies must then get the nod from national and regional politicians.
Three reactors are at one site on Japan’s northernmost main island of Hokkaido, while the remaining seven are in four plants in the west of the country, the utilities said separately.
However, Fukushima operator Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), said it has yet to submit an application for a safety assessment of two of the seven units at the Kashiwazaki Kariwa plant, the world’s biggest.
“We are considering submitting the application but we have a policy of seeking local agreement on it,” a TEPCO spokesman told AFP.
TEPCO’s chastened approach came after the company’s boss received a public tongue-lashing on Friday from local politicians for announcing it would talk to regulators before having consulted locally.
The crisis at Fukushima, caused when a huge tsunami smashed into the plant and sent reactors into meltdown, fueled widespread public distrust of nuclear power.
A vocal anti-atomic campaign, whose leading lights say the industry had an overly cosy relationship with its regulators in the decades leading up to Fukushima, nudged the government into establishing a new industry watchdog.
Eager to prove it has teeth, the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) has set strict new standards that operators must show they can meet before they will be granted permission to re-start mothballed reactors.
Even so, anti-nuclear activists gathered in Tokyo, warning against risks posed by active tectonic plates near or underneath nuclear reactors in quake-prone Japan.
They also criticized the nuclear watchdog for what they say is a half-hearted risk evaluation.
“The plant is located in a vary dangerous place with three active faults in the ground underneath it,” said Taka Yamaguchi, who came from a community near the Tomari plant in Hokkaido.
“I’m full of anger over the application for the re-start” of three reactors there, she said.

While the NRA determines if a plant meets safety requirements, the decision to allow reactors to come back online rests with politicians.
“It is important that assessment will be done in a strict manner by the Nuclear Regulation Authority based on the new standards,” Katsunobu Kato, deputy chief cabinet secretary, told reporters.
“It is a precondition that host communities agree on the re-firing, so we hope utilities give detailed explanations to local residents,” he added.
The new safety standards require utilities to prepare measures against severe accidents or terrorist attacks and to better protect their plants from tsunamis and earthquakes.
The power companies are eager to get their reactors back up and running, having been badly hit by the surging cost of generating electricity from fossil fuel alternatives.
Resource-poor Japan has to import the coal, gas and oil it is using to replace nuclear generating capacity, and the falling value of the yen has pushed up the relative cost of the dollar-priced commodities.
TEPCO is also struggling with the vast expense of the clean-up at Fukushima and with the mounting compensation bills for people whose lives or livelihoods were wrecked by the disaster.
Although the natural disaster of March 2011 claimed around 18,000 lives, no one is officially recorded as having died as a direct result of the radiation released by meltdowns at Fukushima.
However, large areas around the plant had to be evacuated, with tens of thousands of people still unable to return to their homes.


Trump vows economic boom, blames Biden in address to nation

Updated 1 sec ago
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Trump vows economic boom, blames Biden in address to nation

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump promised Americans an economic boom in an address to the nation on Wednesday, while blaming Democratic predecessor Joe Biden for high prices that have hit the Republican’s popularity.
“Good evening America. Eleven months ago I inherited a mess, and I’m fixing it,” the 79-year-old said in his live speech from the White House at the end of his first year back in power.
Trump faces growing voter anger over the issue of affordability despite his efforts to dismiss it as a “hoax” by Democrats, sparking Republican fears they could be punished in the 2026 midterm elections.
The billionaire president insisted that prices of gas and groceries that have worried Americans were “falling rapidly, and it’s not done yet. But boy, are we making progress.”
In a surprise announcement, Trump said that 1.45 million United States military service members would each receive “warrior dividend” bonus checks for $1,776 before Christmas, paid for with revenues raised from tariffs.
He added that specific amount was in honor of the year of the founding of the United States, the 250th anniversary of which the country will celebrate next year.
Trump then promised that “we are poised for an economic boom the likes of which the world has never seen” in 2026, when the United States will co-host the FIFA World Cup, with Canada and Mexico.
But while the White House had billed the speech as a chance for Trump to set out his economic agenda for the rest of his second term, much of it consisted on attacks on familiar targets.
He repeatedly raged against Biden, the Democrats, and migrants whom he said “stole American jobs.”
Trump’s speech comes at the end of a whirlwind year in which he has launched an unprecedented display of presidential power, including a crackdown on migration and the targeting of political opponents.

- Poll worries for Trump -

But polls show what Americans are most concerned about is high prices, which experts say are partly fueled by the tariffs he has slapped on trading partners around the world.
The inflation problem also dogged Biden as he tried to heal the US economy after the Covid pandemic, and the Democrat unsuccessfully tried similar arguments with voters about economic good times to come.
Trump got his worst approval ratings ever for his handling of the economy in a PBS News/NPR/Marist poll published Wednesday, with 57 percent of Americans disapproving and expressing concerns about the cost of living.
A YouGov poll published Tuesday showed that 52 percent of Americans thought the economy was getting worse under Trump.
He has also faced criticism from his Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement for focusing on peace deals in Ukraine and Gaza and on tensions with Venezuela, instead of domestic issues.
Trump did not mention Ukraine or Venezuela, but did boast about the Gaza ceasefire, the US attacks on Iran’s nuclear program, and what he calls a war on drug traffickers.
There are signs Trump’s team has had a wake-up call on the economy in recent weeks, with next year’s midterm elections for the control of Congress already looming.
Republicans lost heavily in elections in November for the mayor of New York and governorships in Virginia and New Jersey, while Democrats ran them close in a previously safe area in Tennessee.
The president is now ramping up his domestic travel to push his economic message.
Last week in Pennsylvania he promised to “make America affordable again,” and on Friday he is due to give another campaign-style rally in North Carolina.
Vice President JD Vance — who is rapidly becoming Trump’s messenger on the issue as he eyes his own presidential run in 2028 — also urged voters to show patience during a speech on Tuesday.