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The government has already decided to scrap six reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi, where backup generators, some of them in basements, were destroyed by the March 11 tsunami -- setting off the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl. The government has said it will take 40 years to fully decommission the plant.
It is unclear whether the age of the reactors was related to the nuclear crisis. The location of the generators, absence of alternative backup power and inadequate venting are believed to be more direct causes, but some critics have said the Fukushima plant showed signs of age, such as cracks in piping and walls.
Promising that nuclear plants may be gone in about four decades may help the government gain public support for getting more reactors running again.
The future of Japan's nuclear policy remains under review. Some people are worried about radiation in the food and water, as well as the health of children, who are more at risk than are adults to sicknesses from radiation exposure.
[Associated
Press;
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