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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan mayor opts to restart reactors
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (UPI) Jul 5, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The mayor of a small town in southwestern Japan approved the restart of two suspended nuclear reactors, the first such decision since the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

As the first local official to decide on the fate of reactors in his area, the decision of Genkai Mayor Hideo Kishimoto, in Saga Prefecture, is seen as setting a possible precedent for other areas of the country.

In addition to the required approval from the central government, Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan's administration is also requesting local officials to approve any nuclear reactor restarts, post Fukushima.

Of Japan's 54 reactors, 35 are offline, most of them to fulfill routine maintenance requirements, rather than because of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, The New York Times reports.

Two of the Genkai plant's four reactors, the No. 2 and No. 3 units, had been shut down since last winter for regular maintenance, their restart postponed amid the country's nuclear crisis.

"We must strongly support the Japanese economy by helping to ensure a stable supply of electricity to western Japan," Kishimoto said of his decision to restart Genkai's reactors, Japanese media reported.

Saga Gov. Yasushi Furukawa is expected to make a final decision on the Genkai reactors in mid-July.

Pointing out that nuclear power-related subsidies and property tax payments from the nuclear plant account for 60 percent of Genkai's fiscal 2011 budget, an editorial Tuesday in The Japan Times argues that Kishimoto had no alternative but to agree to a restart.

While nuclear power generation may be necessary to overcome this summer's power shortage, the editorial said, the government "must present a long-term, concrete plan to phase out nuclear power generation."

A poll by Mainichi Shimbun newspaper released Monday indicates that 51 percent of respondents were opposed to restarting nuclear reactors that have been stopped for inspections. Furthermore, 60 percent said they would accept an increase in electricity prices to support the use of more renewable energy, such as solar and wind power.

Of those polled, 17 percent said nuclear plants should be done away with altogether, a figure 5 percentage points higher than results from the same poll conducted in May.

Last month the newspaper said that governors of 10 prefectures in which nuclear plants are located had said that they weren't in favor of restarting their reactors.

Japan had aimed to build at least 14 new reactors by 2030, increasing the country's share of nuclear power electricity generation to about 50 percent from a share of nearly 30 percent prior to the earthquake.




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Court bans Areva nuclear outsourcing move
Paris (AFP) July 5, 2011 - A court banned French nuclear company Areva on Tuesday from outsourcing some operations at a nuclear waste processing plant in northwest France, saying the plan posed a stress threat to workers.

The Paris court said in its ruling that the planned activity posed "major psychosocial risks and considerable technical and industrial risks and is liable to harm the health and safety of the workers concerned."

The firm wanted to install new heating and cooling operations at its La Hague plant near Cherbourg and to outsource their construction and running to another company, Dalkia.

The court ruled that the changes to the duties of workers at the site, involving potentially dangerous nuclear material and including an obligation for some to train Dalkia employees, constituted a stress and health threat.

It prohibited Areva from following through with the outsourcing and ordered it to pay 28,000 euros ($40,000) in costs to the labour unions that brought the court case.





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CIVIL NUCLEAR
German energy giants await London nuclear decision
Berlin (AFP) July 5, 2011
German energy giants EON and RWE said Tuesday they would wait for London to rule on the future of its nuclear power industry before going ahead with investments in new power plants in Britain. "In principle we are ready (to build the plants) but the political conditions must be right," an EON spokesman told AFP. "Our plan hasn't changed. We have always said we would wait for the British ... read more


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