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Fukui, where 13 reactors are clustered in four complexes along the coast, is often called Japan's "Nuclear Alley," making the region Japan's most nuclear-dependent area. The government issued new safety guidelines in April to address residents' worries. In response, Kansai Electric Power Co. submitted its safety plans for two reactors at the plant, saying the full upgrades will take up to three years. Some of the most crucial measures to secure cooling functions and prevent meltdowns as in Fukushima were installed, but more than one-third of the necessary upgrades on the list are still incomplete. Filtered vents that could substantially reduce radiation leaks in case of an accident threatening an explosion, a radiation-free crisis management building and fences to block debris washed up by a tsunami won't be ready until 2015. This means the plant, as well as plant workers and residents, won't be fully protected from radiation leaks in case of a Fukushima-class crisis. Masataka Shimizu, former president of Tokyo Electric Power Co., which operates the Fukushima plant, said its crisis management building installed in 2010 saved the crisis from becoming a catastrophe. "It's horrifying just to imagine if it hadn't been there yet," Shimizu told a parliamentary accident inquiry Friday. Noda, however, said that the safety measures are provisional and that they would have to be more closely examined when a new regulatory agency is installed. The step has been delayed due to demands by opposition parties to make it more independent than the government proposal.
[Associated
Press;
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