. Space Industry and Business News .




.
CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan restarts first nuclear plant since disaster
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 2, 2011


Japan on Wednesday restarted its first nuclear reactor since the Fukushima disaster in March, in a boost to its beleaguered atomic power industry faced with a deeply sceptical public.

Power began flowing from the Genkai nuclear power plant reactor in the south of Japan, Kyushu Electric Power said, less than a month after the facility automatically shut down following a safety alert.

The reactor is expected to reach its normal level of power generation on Friday, a spokesman for the plant told AFP.

The reactor is the first to resume operations since the massive earthquake and tsunami of March 11 sparked an atomic emergency at the Fukushima Daiichi plant in the northeast of the country.

The restart came as the operator of the tsunami-crippled Fukushima plant denied that signs of a new nuclear reaction at the stricken plant were a setback to recovery efforts there.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said it had begun injecting water and boric acid into Reactor No. 2 after scientists detected the possible presence of xenon 133 and xenon 135, byproducts of a nuclear reaction.

The two substances have short half-lives -- five days for xenon 133 and just nine hours for xenon 135 -- indicating that any nuclear fission was recent.

"Considering the half-life of xenon 133 and 135, we believe nuclear fission may have occurred in the recent past," said Junichi Matsumoto, TEPCO official in charge of nuclear operations.

There is a possibility that criticality, a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction, occurred temporarily, Matsumoto said, but added it would not have lasted long enough to pose any risk.

The temperature at the reactor No. 2 had been brought to below 100 degrees centigrade (212 Fahrenheit), TEPCO said, one of the conditions for the utility to declare so-called "cold shutdown".

The possible fission "has no major impact on the reactor's state of being cooled down", Matsumoto told a news conference.

Technicians have been battling since the tsunami to achieve cold shutdown of the reactors, a stable condition in which temperatures drop and no reaction takes place.

Since the nuclear disaster struck in March, Japan's atomic industry has been struggling to overcome the scepticism of a public largely unwilling to allow operations to restart at dozens of stalled reactors nationwide.

Wednesday's restart at Genkai was seen as a boost to the industry, even though Kyushu Electric officials said the situation there was different from that at other suspended reactors, which have to undergo government-mandated stress tests.

The Genkai reactor was halted after an "abnormality" in its steam condensing unit emerged on October 4, Kyodo news reported, adding that Industry Minister Yukio Edano, who oversees the sector, had attributed the fault to "human error".

Edano said on Tuesday the final decision on restarting the reactor rested with Kyushu Electric because the country's nuclear regulator had found its procedures to be sound, but he urged the company to consult the local community.

Reactors halted for checks must pass stress tests before they are allowed to resume operation, but local authorities have the power to veto the restarts.

Public officials in Saga gave their assent to the restart there after the nuclear safety agency gave its stamp of approval.

Saga Governor Yasushi Furukawa told reporters: "If the state made the judgment after a full examination, we'll accept it," Kyodo reported.

Before the disaster at Fukushima, Japan relied on nuclear power for around a third of its electricity, and has since had to ramp up its imports of thermal fuels to plug the supply gap as the number of active reactors dwindles.

A nationwide campaign to save energy over the summer is to continue over the winter, amid warnings of a shortfall that could be particularly acute in western Japan, which is more heavily dependent on nuclear power.

Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



CIVIL NUCLEAR
Areva finds 12,300 tonnes of uranium in Jordan: report
Amman (AFP) Nov 1, 2011
French nuclear giant Areva has discovered 12,300 tonnes of uranium in central Jordan, state-run media said on Tuesday, as the parched kingdom tries to develop nuclear energy to meet its growing needs. "Reserves of 12,300 tonnes of uranium have been in found in central Jordan," the Petra news agency quoted the French company as saying in a statement published Tuesday. The Jordan French Ur ... read more


CIVIL NUCLEAR
News Corp. net profit down five percent

Spin lasers in the fast lane

An important aspect of structural design of super-tall buildings and structures

Tech-obsessed Koreans drive smartphone boom

CIVIL NUCLEAR
AEHF-1 Satellite Arrives at Its Operational Orbit After 14-Month Journey

China suspect in US satellite interference: report

Emirates seek French military satellite

First MEADS Battle Manager Begins Integration Testing in the United States

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Vega getting ready for exploitation

MSU satellite orbits the Earth after early morning launch

NASA Launches Multi-Talented Earth-Observing Satellite

The Arianespace launcher family comes together in French Guiana

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Russia to launch four Glonass satellites in November

One Soyuz launcher, two Galileo satellites, three successes for Europe

Soyuz places Galileo satellites in orbit - mission control

GPS shoes for Alzheimer's patients to hit US

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Asia airline body raps EU plan for carbon tax

OGC Team Produces Winning Single European Sky Aviation Proposal

China Southern Airlines grounds Airbus A380

Japan's ANA net profit up 72.1% in first half

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Zinc oxide microwires improve the performance of light-emitting diodes

A SHARP New Microscope for the Next Generation of Microchips

Quantum computer components coalesce to converse

Single photons for optical information transfer

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Small but agile Proba-1 reaches 10 years in orbit

Ball Aerospace-Built NPP Satellite Launched Successfully

Lockheed Martin Begins GeoEye-2 Satellite Integration

Better use of Global Geospatial Information for Solving Development Challenges

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Beijing vows better pollution data after smog anger

Myanmar seeks outside help to build 'green economy'

UK environmental consulting market falls in 2010; prospects flat for 2011

EU to extend coastal pollution fines to 200 nautical miles


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement