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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan to probe 'active faults' under nuclear plants
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 18, 2012



Japan's nuclear safety watchdog on Wednesday ordered a probe into claims the country's only working nuclear power station sits on an active tectonic fault.

The order came as Kansai Electric Power Company (KEPCO) readied to refire a second reactor at the Oi plant, western Japan, just weeks after the first unit was restarted, ending a brief nuclear-free period in earthquake-prone Japan.

A spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said KEPCO had to re-examine the Earth's crust underneath Oi, while the operator of the Shika plant in nearby Ishikawa also had to carry out further studies.

The decision came after geological experts argued both plants are likely sitting on active faults and could be vulnerable to earthquakes if tectonic plates shift.

Japan's entire stable of nuclear reactors was shut down in the months after the disaster at Fukushima when an earthquake-sparked tsunami knocked out cooling systems causing meltdowns that spread radiation over a large area.

A parliamentary report earlier this month called for further research into the effect on the reactors of the earthquake itself, adding it was not possible to say for certain the tsunami was the sole cause of damage at Fukushima.

Despite widespread public fears over the safety of nuclear power, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda in June ordered the restarting of reactors at Oi amid fears of a summer power crunch.

Unit No. 3 was back up at full operating power by mid-July and KEPCO said its plans to re-fire Unit No. 4 on Wednesday would not be affected by the probe order.

"The company from its evaluations believes the fault has not been active for between 120,000 and 130,000 years," a spokesman said.

"Now the company has received the order to reinvestigate the matter and swiftly report, we will comply fully with this order," he said.

A statement from Hokuriku Electric Power Co, the operator of the Shika plant, said the company would fully comply with the order to conduct a survey and would report its findings to the safety agency.

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Workers remove nuclear fuel from Fukushima plant
Tokyo (AFP) July 18, 2012 - Workers at Japan's crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant removed nuclear fuel Wednesday for the first time since last year's tsunami-sparked crisis, media said.

Television footage showed dozens of operatives, all wearing white protection suits, atop the heavily damaged building at unit No. 4, extracting a fuel rod with a crane.

The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said earlier the operation was planned for some time this month. The company said two rods, each measuring around four metres (12 feet), are to be taken out of the fuel pool.

Wednesday's operation was the first time TEPCO has been able to remove any nuclear material since disaster struck at the plant in March 2011.

Reactors No. 1, 2 and 3 all melted down, but reactor No. 4 was empty when the tsunami crashed ashore. However, a disabled cooling system led to the fuel pool -- where both used and unused fuel was kept -- boiling.

That resulted in an explosion after a build up of hydrogen inside the reactor building.

"The company will examine the extent of corrosion on the fuel rods, which may have been caused by the sea water that workers had to use to keep the temperature down," a company spokeswoman said, without confirming the operation took place on Wednesday "for nuclear security reasons".

Television crews used helicopters to film the operation, defying requests from TEPCO.

More than 1,300 used fuel rods and over 200 unused ones were in the water pool at unit No. 4 when the tsunami hit, the spokeswoman said.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Massive anti-nuclear rally staged in Tokyo
Tokyo (AFP) July 16, 2012
Tens of thousands of people rallied in Tokyo on Monday demanding an end to nuclear power, the latest in a series of anti-atomic gatherings following the tsunami-sparked disaster at Fukushima last year. Demonstrators marched through streets near Yoyogi park under scorching sunshine on a national holiday, chanting in chorus: "Don't resume nuclear power operation. Prime Minister (Yoshihiko) Nod ... read more


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