A governor gave final approval Friday for
a nuclear power plant to restart in southern Japan, the first to
resume operations under new safety rules imposed in the wake of the
2011 Fukushima Dai-ichi meltdowns caused by an earthquake and
tsunami.
Kagoshima Gov. Yuichiro Ito said the two
reactors at the Sendai Nuclear Power Station would be restarted
despite concerns among some local residents.
"All things considered, I must say that we
still need to rely on nuclear energy, and it is extremely important
for us to steadily carry out the plan," he told a news conference
hours after the prefectural assembly endorsed the restart.
The Sendai reactors are expected to go
back online early next year following on-site checks by regulators.
Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority gave them passing grades in
July under stricter safety requirements that factored in the lessons
of the Fukushima meltdowns.
At the Fukushima plant on Friday, three
workers were injured, one seriously, when a steel railing fell from
the top of a tank being constructed to store contaminated water, the
plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., said. The workers were
not contaminated with any radiation, but one was unconscious and was
airlifted to a hospital. He later regained consciousness, while the
two others had less serious injuries.
Massive amounts of contaminated water
continue to leak from the damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi reactors,
hampering the plant's decommissioning, which is expected to take
decades.
All 48 workable reactors in Japan have
been off line for safety checks or repairs since the 2011 disaster,
except for two that operated temporarily for about a year. The
Sendai plant would be the first to restart under new safety rules
imposed after the Fukushima crisis.
The plant's host town, Satsumasendai, has
already voted to restart the plant. The governor's endorsement
completes the required process of local consent.
Some residents were not convinced by the
decision.
At the prefectural assembly on Friday, the
chairman's announcement of the yes vote was nearly inaudible as
about 200 citizens in the audience shouted their opposition. They
stood up, some holding "NO" signs, while others shouted "Protect
residents' lives," and "Shame on you," according to the Kyodo News
agency.
They are particularly concerned about
several active volcanos near the plant after a recent fatal volcanic
explosion in northern Japan demonstrated that eruptions are
virtually unpredictable.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been pushing
to restart some of the 48 reactors, saying a prolonged shutdown will
hurt the economy. Japan is heavily dependent on imported sources of
energy.
Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry
Yoichi Miyazawa, who visited Kagoshima to urge the governor to
support the government's energy policy, applauded Friday's
announcement.
"Gaining local residents' understanding is
very important," he said.
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