A town in southwest Japan yesterday became the first to approve the restart of a nuclear power station, a step forward in Japan’s fraught process of reviving an industry left idled by the Fukushima Dai-ichi catastrophe in 2011.
Satsumasendai, a town of 100,000 that hosts the two-reactor Kyushu Electric Power Co plant, is 1,000km southwest of Tokyo and has long relied on the Sendai plant for government subsidies and jobs.
Nineteen of the city’s 26 assembly members voted in favor of restarting the plant, while four members voted against and three abstained, a city assembly member said.
Photo: Bloomberg
The restart of Japan’s first reactors to receive clearance under new rules imposed since the Fukushima Dai-ichi meltdown is unlikely until next year, as Kyushu Electric still needs to pass operational safety checks.
All 48 of the country’s nuclear reactors were gradually taken offline following Fukushima Dai-ichi, the world’s worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.
An earthquake and tsunami struck the plant, 220km northeast of Tokyo, sparking triple nuclear meltdowns, forcing more than 160,000 residents to flee from nearby towns and contaminating water, food and air.
Japan has been forced to import expensive fossil fuels to replace nuclear power, which previously supplied about 30 percent of the nation’s electricity.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government is pushing to restart nuclear reactors, but has said it will defer to local authorities to approve a policy that is still unpopular with large swaths of the public.
The restart divided communities nearest to the plant, pitting the host township that gets direct benefits from the reactors against other communities that do not reap the benefits, but say they would be equally exposed to radioactive releases in the event of a disaster.
In Ichikikushikino, a town less than 5km from the Sendai plant, more than half the 30,000 residents signed a petition opposing the restart earlier this year.
In the lead-up to the local vote, officials held town hall meetings in neighboring towns to explain the restart, where some residents complained that the public meetings were restrictive and did not address concerns about evacuation plans.
A fire broke out at Kyushu Electric’s other nuclear plant yesterday, Kyodo news reported.
The fire started in an auxiliary building of the idled nuclear station and was extinguished by plant workers, the agency said. There were no injuries and no release of radioactive material, it said.
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