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Sayonara for New Nuclear Plans

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  • Sayonara for New Nuclear Plans

    Japan nuclear power expansion plans abandoned


    Japan is to abandon plans to expand its nuclear power industry and make renewables a key part of its energy policy, the prime minister, Naoto Kan, said as the country marked two months since the tsunami disaster.

    As workers continued efforts to stabilise the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, Kan said he would "start from scratch" a policy that initially envisaged nuclear making up more than 50% of Japan's energy needs by 2030.

    Japan, whose 54 nuclear reactors provide 30% of its electricity, had planned to build at least 14 new reactors over the next 20 years, but policymakers accept that will be impossible in light of the Fukushima crisis.

    Kan said that renewables, which make up 20% of overall supply, would have a bigger role to play in meeting the country's energy needs. "I think it is necessary to move in the direction of promoting natural energy and renewable energy such as wind, solar and biomass," he said.

    The stronger commitment to renewables marks Kan's second sudden shift on nuclear power in the space of a week following his order to close the Hamaoka atomic plant, which sits on an active fault line, while a new tsunami wall is built.


    About 80,000 people within 20km of the Fukushima Daiichi plant were forced out of their homes by the accident and have yet to be told when they will be able to return permanently.

    The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), has vowed to stabilise radiation levels and achieve safe "cold shutdown" of the plant's damaged reactors within six to nine months.

    In the past few days, workers have entered the No 1 reactor building to start reconnecting cooling systems knocked out by the tsunami. On Tuesday they were preparing to flood the reactor's containment vessel to immerse overheating fuel rods in cool water.

    Tepco sought to calm fears about rising temperatures in the No 3 reactor, releasing an image showing fuel rods covered with debris from hydrogen explosions in March. The firm said it believed the fuel rods, some of which contain plutonium, had been largely undamaged.

    On Wednesday, Tepco said it would accept the conditions for state support for a massive compensation payout for those deprived of their homes and businesses by the Fukushima accident.

    The utility, which has seen its market value plummet since the disaster, accepted there should be no upper limit on damages that could reach 10 trillion yen. It must also dramatically cut costs and cooperate with an investigation by a government-appointed panel.

    The government is considering setting up a fund that would draw on cash from the state and other power companies if Tepco were unable to cover all of the compensation claims itself.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011...lans-abandoned



    Japan earthquake and tsunami – town by town

    The toll of dead and missing along Japan's eastern coast after March's disaster


    interactive map: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/inte...ami-towns-toll

  • #2
    Re: Sayonara for New Nuclear Plans

    Originally posted by don View Post
    Kan said that renewables, which make up 20% of overall supply, would have a bigger role to play in meeting the country's energy needs. "I think it is necessary to move in the direction of promoting natural energy and renewable energy such as wind, solar and biomass," he said.
    From one mistake to the next...

    If most of that 20% is solar and wind power, then Japan is going to expand nuclear or it will start building coal or natural gas when it "expands" its renewable power supply. Having a relatively small (5-10%) proportion of power derived from "renewables" doesn't create much of a problem, but once wind and solar make up a big proportion of your grid, you will either have reliable backups (nuclear, coal, natural gas or hydroelectric) or you will do what the UK is proposing for itself, which is return to the Dark Ages.

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    • #3
      Re: Sayonara for New Nuclear Plans

      Sad to say, the future for Japan looks more and more like COAL.

      They don't like nuclear in 9.0 earthquakes. They certainly wouldn't like hydro-electric dams in 9.0 earthquakes. Nat. gas would have to be transported across the Pacific, probably as a liquid under pressure. That has an explosion risk. So, that leaves good old-fashioned, dirty, filthy, cheap, abundant, reliable, easy-to-use, and naturally radioactive: COAL.

      Enjoy the lung diseases, the brown haze, the acid rain, the ash, the soot, the CO2, the nitrous-oxide, and sometimes the sulfur-dioxide from COAL.

      But I know these eco-frauds well: They killed nuclear at Henderson, Nevada. They converted their nuclear plant to COAL in order to be politically correct, and they will do the same thing in Japan: nuclear to COAL.

      And some wonder why I use the term: eco-frauds ?
      Dark Ages can happen two ways: by the lights going-off without nuclear, or by the lights coming back on with COAL.
      Last edited by Starving Steve; May 11, 2011, 12:14 PM.

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