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Japan Nuclear Power: New Safety Standards Set Ahead Of Restarting Reactors

By MARI YAMAGUCHI 04/ 6/12 01:13 PM ET AP

Japan Nuclear Power
In this photo released by Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO), a section of a hose, top, from which tons of highly radioactive water appears to have leaked into the ocean, is seen covered with vinyl tape at the tsunami-hit Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, northeastern Japan, Thursday, April 5, 2012. (AP Photo/Tokyo Electric Power Co.)

TOKYO — Japan announced new guidelines Friday for how its nuclear power plants try to prevent disasters like last year's meltdowns, as the government aims to ease public concern about restarting idled reactors.

Facing a national power crunch, the government is anxious to restart two reactors in Fukui, western Japan, before the last operating reactor of the 54 in the country goes offline in May.

But the public strongly opposes nuclear energy since the meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant, and local leaders are reluctant to approve restarting any of the reactors.

The guidelines announced Friday are more extensive than computer-simulated "stress tests" designed to estimate how reactors would cope in the event of a major earthquake and tsunami like what overwhelmed Fukushima Dai-ichi last year. Unlike in France and other countries where stress tests are meant to find weaknesses or suspend a facility, Japan tried to use them as a safety guarantee. Many people questioned the objectivity of the tests, though two reactors passed them.

If utilities meet the new guidelines, authorities hope the public will be convinced the reactors are safe, including the two in Ohi, Fukui prefecture, that have finished regular safety checks and the stress tests and are ready to restart.

Economy and Trade Minister Yukio Edano called the guidelines "easy to understand" criteria that aim to set higher standards for natural disasters, but do not factor in terrorist attacks, airplane accidents and other emergencies.

The guidelines, based on 30 recommendations adopted last month by the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, require nuclear power plants to install filtered vents that could reduce radiation leaks in case of an accident, as well as a device to prevent hydrogen explosions. About 13 of the recommendations – the most crucial measures needed to secure cooling functions and prevent meltdowns as in Fukushima – were implemented, but the rest were not. The guidelines did not set deadlines for the steps to be finished.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura said the government can order utilities to restart reactors regardless of local opposition, because obtaining residents' consent is not legally required.

The officials will make a final decision based on NISA's evaluation and the reactors' operator Kansai Electric Power Co.'s safety implementation plans.

Critics and officials in cities and towns near Fukui are requesting explanations for the hastily-published guidelines.

"Why rush? It's too soon to decide. I think they should gain understanding from the public first," said Yukiko Kada, governor of Shiga prefecture bordering Fukui.

Toru Hashimoto, the outspoken mayor of Osaka – a top shareholder of Kansai Electric – criticized the government for compiling the new guideline just in two days.

All but one of Japan's 54 reactors have been shut down for inspections, required every 13 months. None have been restarted since the March 11, 2011, tsunami set off meltdowns in three reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant.

The nation's last operational reactor, on the northern island of Hokkaido, goes off line in early May. If none of the reactors are restarted, Japan could face power shortages this summer. Before the crisis, Japan depended on nuclear power for one-third of its electricity.

To make up for the shortfall, Japan has expanded production at conventional gas- and oil-fired plants. Noda has promised to reduce Japan's reliance on nuclear power over time and plans to lay out a new energy policy by the summer, but his government faces pressure from big businesses to quickly get reactors back on line and maintain nuclear power to keep the economy afloat.

Fukui, home to 13 reactors clustered in four complexes along the Sea of Japan coast, is called Japan's nuclear alley.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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TOKYO — Japan announced new guidelines Friday for how its nuclear power plants try to prevent disasters like last year's meltdowns, as the government aims to ease public concern about restarting...
TOKYO — Japan announced new guidelines Friday for how its nuclear power plants try to prevent disasters like last year's meltdowns, as the government aims to ease public concern about restarting...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:50 PM on 04/22/2012
VOTE NOW
VOTE TODAY!
http://nukeprofessional.blogspot.com/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:45 PM on 04/22/2012
#Fukushima: Robert Alvarez needs some appreciation!! Pls RT!! http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-alvarez/the-fukushima-nuclear-dis_b_1444146.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:31 PM on 04/22/2012
Oh God, my heart breaks for these children.
What about the Children!?!?
http://schockweiler.blogspot.de/2012/04/health-issues-radiation-sickness-in.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
01:00 PM on 04/22/2012
NHK: Another Mitsui chemical plant had trouble BEFORE multiple explosions — All plants were halted at time of blasts (VIDEO)
http://enenews.com/nhk-another-mitsui-chemical-plant-had-trouble-before-multiple-explosions-all-plants-had-been-halted-at-time-of-blasts-thought-to-have-prevented-larger-number-of-casualties
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
11:44 AM on 04/22/2012
Chemical blast video: Twin-explosion hits plant in Japan: http://youtu.be/wxRddIOMLU8 via @youtube
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
11:25 AM on 04/22/2012
Second explosion at Mitsui plant — Kyodo: 3,400 drums with radioactive materials — FNN confirms depleted uranium at plant — “Did not appear to have any effect on radiation levels” (VIDEOS)
http://enenews.com/developing-explosion-at-japan-chemical-complex-still-burning-depleted-uranium-stored-onsite-govt-says-no-release-of-toxic-material-photos-video
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:38 AM on 04/22/2012
What in the hell? I'm not sure I understand exactly what they are doing.
Big Science in Small Town Japan | Ben Still | Life & Physics http://gu.com/p/373dp/tw via @guardian
Hundreds of particle physicists are descending once more on the sleepy village of Tokai-mura in Eastern Japan. Over the next week we will discuss the present and future of an experiment that many have devoted several years of their lives to. An experiment that will forge a path into a new era of understanding the creation of our Universe.
PARTICLE PHYSICISTS....ummmmm
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:21 AM on 04/22/2012
#Fukushima: Is Another Global Disaster Waiting at Fukushima? http://p.ost.im/p/eghKPQ
Testifying before the Japanese House of Councilors, Mitsuhei Murata (Japan’s former ambassador to Switzerland) raised a disturbing threat: 85 times as much radioactive cesium-137 as was released at Chernobyl is at risk of being released into the atmosphere. This is not within a containment vessel, and the risk is fairly serious.

Japan, by the way, is down to just a single operating nuclear power plant from a high of 54–many of these shutdowns a result of the accident at Fukushima that made nuclear power unacceptable.

And the US is still extending licenses on decrepit worn out old nukes, and trying for the first time in decades to build new ones. What kind of madness is this?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:03 AM on 04/22/2012
They survived Nagasaki to tell the horrors

When asked how difficult it was to have foregone their childhood to the ravages of the atom bomb, Ishikawa Ritsuko said, “I lost my parents in the bombing and I was air-lifted out of Nagasaki when I was just one-year-old. When I attended school, my teacher used to give us red carnations on every Mother’s Day to be given to our mothers with love. I did not have anybody to give it to and the flowers would just fade away.”

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/they-survived-nagasaki-to-tell-the-horrors/250458-60-122.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:01 AM on 04/22/2012
THE SYKES FINDERS UNI PUBLIC LECTURE VS THE UNI SA
http://nuclearhistory.wordpress.com/2012/04/22/the-sykes-finders-uni-public-lecture-vs-the-uni-sa/
No more. No nukes. No arguments. No more US DOE paid agents disrupting UniSA Fukushima talks. Butt out. Move to Los Alamos and leave Adelaide people free to think and speak.

It is typical of DOE paid contractors promoting hormesis to disrupt public meetings. Dr Gofman reported the technique in the 1970s. At the recent Uni SA Fukushima talk by a former Australia diplomat with extensive knowledge of Japan, a US DOE contractor (aka “researcher”) questioned the speaker’s right to comment.

However, the same US DOE funded mob recently held their own little talk at Flinders Uni. Despite information to the contrary on the FU website, Dr Jim Green was talk by FU in an email that: “From:
“Jim Green (FoE).”
Add sender to Contacts
To:
“paul langley”
hi Paul
i asked Flinders Uni library and NTEU if they would distribute copies of the 2-page Karamoskos paper at the Sykes talk. NTEU said no. Haven’t heard from Flinders library but expect them to say no.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
12:19 PM on 04/21/2012
Ed Norton:
Earth Day 2012: This Isn't About Tree-Hugging Anymore, It's about HOW WE LIVE http://huff.to/HZTvUv
We need a national, bi-partisan commitment to legislation curbing carbon emissions here at home and we need it to have teeth and we need it immediately. And we need to invest in an American technological future that operates sustainably within the natural systems that support our lives. (New Voice 4 Anti-Nukes maybe?)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
11:19 AM on 04/21/2012
snowwy

"There is a lesson to be learned from all this:

1. nuclear power is not safe, never was and human error will always occur along with technical failure

2. nuclear power is not cheap as the only ones who it is cheap for is the plant operators, everyone else will pay in health, taxes and personal security for the shortfall of safety measures.

3. every nuclear power plant starts off as new and becomes old and with every operating year the risk increases. not just statistical risk also actual risk.

4. when plants become old, they do not get decommissioned because it is too expensive but run until the accidents become so frequent that the general population will suffer.

5. there is not final storage for spent nuclear fuel on this planet. as long as energy creation creates practically unmanageable waste for longer than one generation then humans should steer clear of it completely because we leave a legacy of severe issues for generations to come.

switch them off already and face the facts, be it black outs or whatever…
Everything seems better than the current situation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
09:59 AM on 04/21/2012
#Fukushima: NRC leader fights abuse accusations AGAIN? NRC Tools sure want him gone http://www.lvrj.com/news/nrc-chief-fights-accusations-148331655.html

FIGHT THEM JACZKO!