Latest News

Japan regulator to suspend Chubu Electric Nuclear Power Plant Review pending Report

The nuclear watchdog in Japan said that it will order Chubu Electric Power on Wednesday to submit a report detailing?falsified data? and pause the review of its utility's application?to restart?its only atomic power plant. The Nuclear Regulation Authority in Japan (NRA) warned that it would take a harsh action against Chubu Electric after discovering the utility had manipulated data used for the reviews of its No. The Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) of Japan had?previously?warned against a severe response towards Chubu Electric, including scrapping the review altogether after it was revealed that data used in the reviews of reactors No. Hamaoka, which is located in Shizuoka Prefecture along the Pacific Coast of Japan, has 4 reactors.

The NRA decided to conduct an 'on-site inspection to determine the truth behind the irregularities at its Wednesday'regular meeting. The NRA gave the utility until the 31st of March to provide findings about the misconduct. It also said that it would pause its review process due to the compromised 'credibility' of the documents.

Chubu Electric began reviewing?the units more than a decade ago. Some experts expected a possible restart by 2030. In its latest business plan, the company predicted that a restart would be imminent. It estimated that it could save about 260 billion Japanese yen (1.64 billion dollars) in annual power procurement costs.

Utility plans to decommission No.1 & No.2 units at Hamakao, but has not yet applied for the restart of Hamakao's 5th reactor. The NRA decision comes at a time when Tokyo Electric Power is preparing to start up its first nuclear plant this month since a tsunami destroyed Fukushima Daiichi in '2011. This was the worst nuclear catastrophe since the Chornobyl Crisis in Russia in 1986 and shaken the public's faith in atomic energy. The Fukushima nuclear meltdown forced the shutdown of all 54 reactors in Japan. Since then, 14 reactors have been restarted. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi backed nuclear restarts in order to increase energy security and reduce the cost of fossil fuels imported into Japan, which accounts for 60% to 70% or its electricity generation.

(source: Reuters)