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hatrack

(59,612 posts)
Wed Dec 27, 2023, 10:43 AM Dec 2023

Japan's Nuclear Regulator OKs Restart Of World's Largest Plant; Local Approvals Pending In Niigata Prefecture

Japan's nuclear regulator announced Wednesday that it has lifted its safety ban on Tokyo Electric Power's (TEPCO) Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, the largest in the world in terms of capacity. TEPCO has been looking to restart the plant due to high operating costs. It must now seek permission from local bodies in the Niigata prefecture, Kashiwazaki city, and Kariwa village.

The Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant has a capacity of 8,212 megawatts (MW) and was TEPCO's only operable atomic power station. It has been offline since 2012, after the Fukushima disaster in March 2011 led to the shutdown of all nuclear power plants in Japan. The Japanese Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NRA) said TEPCO's preparedness had improved and decided to lift the de facto ban. The body has carried out more than 4,000 hours of inspection of its facilities.

Previously in 2021, the NRA had barred the plant from operating due to safety breaches and insufficient antiterrorism measures. This included a failure to protect nuclear materials and an incident that involved an unauthorized staff member accessing sensitive areas of the plant.

It had then issued an order that prevented TEPCO from transporting new uranium fuel to the plant or loading fuel rods into its reactors.

EDIT

https://www.dw.com/en/japan-allows-worlds-biggest-nuclear-plant-to-restart/a-67829687

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Japan's Nuclear Regulator OKs Restart Of World's Largest Plant; Local Approvals Pending In Niigata Prefecture (Original Post) hatrack Dec 2023 OP
In the years after the shutdown, 84 million people died worldwide from air pollution. NNadir Dec 2023 #1

NNadir

(33,621 posts)
1. In the years after the shutdown, 84 million people died worldwide from air pollution.
Wed Dec 27, 2023, 11:42 AM
Dec 2023

The death rate from air pollution is roughly 7 million people per year. No one gives a shit though.

The concentration of the dangerous fossil fuel waste carbon dioxide in the planetary atmosphere has risen just shy of 30 ppm as of this writing (Mauna Loa Observatory, accessed 12/27/2023.)

Weekly average CO2 at Mauna Loa

How many people died from radiation releases at Fukushima again?

As many as died from the coal, oil and gas burned to run computers to discuss it?

Fear and ignorance kills people; it always has; it always will.

In this case, it's killing the entire planet.

Restarting the reactors comes under the general rubric of "too little, too late."

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