Japan utilities set to
scrap five aging nuclear reactors
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[March 17, 2015] TOKYO
(Reuters) - Three aging nuclear reactors in Japan will be decommissioned
due to the high cost of upgrading them in line with tougher safety
standards set after the Fukushima disaster, their operators said on
Tuesday.
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Another two reactors were also likely to be scrapped, local media
reports said, with announcements expected later in the week.
The moves are the first concrete sign that Japan's nuclear industry
is heeding a government request to shut down older reactors that are
considered more vulnerable to natural disasters in the hope that it
will ease public concerns about a restart of other reactors.
All 48 of Japan's nuclear reactors were taken offline after an
earthquake and tsunami set off meltdowns at Tokyo Electric Power's
Fukushima Daiichi plant in 2011.
As many as two-thirds of the country's reactors may never return to
operation because of high costs, local opposition or seismic risks,
a Reuters analysis showed last year.
Kansai Electric Power, which depended on its nuclear fleet for
nearly half of its total power output before 2011, said on Tuesday
it would scrap its Mihama No. 1 and No. 2 reactors. Japan Atomic
Power said it would decommission its Tsuruga No. 1 reactor.
Kyushu Electric Power and Chugoku Electric Power are both expected
to announce their plans to scrap two old reactors on Wednesday.
The five reactors are among Japan's oldest, ranging in age from 39
to 44 years, and have relatively low generating capacity of up to
559 megawatts each.
It is the first time utilities have opted to close older reactors to
comply with new safety standards set after the Fukushima disaster
that limits a nuclear reactor's lifespan to 40 years unless it can
clear tough rules for a one-time extension. The deadline to apply
for that extension is July 2015.
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Japan's trade ministry has been pushing nuclear operators for a
quick decision on scrapping aging reactors that are too costly to
upgrade, promising financial support for a smooth decommissioning.
Japan has revised accounting rules to allow utilities to spread the
write-offs for reactor closures over 10 years and to pass on some of
the cost to ratepayers.
For Japan's newer plants, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said his
government will restart reactors that have won approval from the
nuclear regulator.
So far, Kyushu Electric's two-reactor Sendai plant and Kansai
Electric's No. 3 and No. 4 Takahama reactors have cleared initial
safety checks.
(Reporting by Kentaro Hamada; Editing by Richard Pullin)
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