Latest News

TEPCO, Japan's nuclear power company, will partially restart the world's largest nuclear power plant on 20 January

TEPCO, Japan's nuclear power company, will partially restart the world's largest nuclear power plant on 20 January
TEPCO, Japan's nuclear power company, will partially restart the world's largest nuclear power plant on 20 January

TEPCO president Tomiaki Kobayakawa said to reporters that the company plans to restart its Kashiwazaki - Kariwa nuclear plant on January 20.

The prefecture assembly of Niigata in the region that the plant is located gave the green light to the partial restart. This will be TEPCO's first partial restart since the Fukushima Daiichi reactor meltdown in 2011.

Kashiwazaki - Kariwa is located 220 km northwest of Tokyo. It was one of 54 reactors that were shut down after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant was crippled by the earthquake and tsunami in 2011.

Kobayakawa stated that "as the company responsible for the Fukushima Daiichi disaster, we will apply reflections and lessons learnt... We will proceed to restart the plant, the first one in 14 years. Safety will be our top priority."

Japan restarted?14 of the 33 remaining operable reactors as it attempts to wean itself from imported fossil fuels. In November, it proposed a public-loan system as it?wants?to double the share nuclear power in its energy mix.

Kashiwazaki's total power is 8.2 gigawatts. This would be enough to run a few million homes. The restart will bring a 1.36 GW power unit online by January and restart another with the same capacity in 2030.

TEPCO has stated that it may decommission a few of the five remaining units. (Reporting and writing by Yuka Obayashi, Katya Glubkova, Editing by Jamie Freed & Muralikumar Aantharaman).

(source: Reuters)