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Japan down to one nuke reactor after shutdown

Japan down to one nuke reactor after shutdown

Updated: 2012-03-27 08:25

By Agence France-Presse in Tokyo (China Daily)

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Japan was on Monday left with only one working nuclear reactor after Tokyo Electric Power Co shuttered its final generator for scheduled safety checks.

The vast utility's entire stock of 17 reactors is now idle, including three units that suffered a meltdown when the tsunami hit Fukushima, as Japan warily eyes a spike in electricity demand over the hot and humid summer.

Only one of Japan's 54 units - in northernmost Hokkaido - is still working, and that is scheduled to be shut down for maintenance work in May.

The No 6 unit at TEPCO's Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant "stopped generating electricity at 23:59 on Sunday, and its reactor was suspended at 1:46 on Monday", TEPCO spokesman Osamu Yokokura said.

The No 6 unit is expected to undergo checks for several months, "but it depends on the result of checks, and if we find some defects it may take more time to fix them", Yokokura said.

Japan's nuclear power industry lost public confidence when last March's tsunami knocked out cooling systems at TEPCO-operated Fukushima, sending three reactors into meltdowns.

Radiation was spread over a wide area, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes and rendering farmland useless in the world's worst nuclear accident for a quarter of a century.

Reactors idled for tests must get the consent of host communities before being re-started, something many of those living near nuclear power plants are now unwilling to give, leaving power companies no choice but to rely more heavily on fossil fuels.

In addition to the consent of host communities, utilities have to pass stress tests conducted by the government's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency and get the green light from another government safety commission.

Japan's Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Yukio Edano has said the government will not introduce a summer cap on the use of electricity or the rolling blackouts that were carried out last year after the nuclear accident.

"We are expected to secure a stable supply of electric power for the time being," TEPCO President Toshio Nishizawa said in a statement on Sunday.

"But we call on customers to continue cooperating in saving electricity."

A spokesman for Hokkaido Electric Power Co, the operator of the only reactor remaining in operation, said its No 3 reactor at its Tomari nuclear power plant "will go through a regular check up from May 5, which is expected to end in August".

A lawyer representing shareholders suing TEPCO for $68 billion said on Monday the company's executives should be prepared for misery and poverty to make amends.

Hiroyuki Kawai, who is leading 42 shareholders in their bid for compensation from TEPCO for negligence over the tsunami-sparked disaster at the plant, said senior managers must be made to pay.

"Warnings have to be issued that, if you make wrong decisions or do wrong, you must compensate with your own money," Kawai said.

(China Daily 03/27/2012 page11)