Japan restarted nuclear power after the Fukushima disaster
Japan will restart its nuclear power program today after two years of disruption due to community concerns related to the Fukushima disaster.
Japan will restart its nuclear power program today after two years of disruption due to community concerns related to the Fukushima disaster.
Japan restarted nuclear power after the tsunami
The reboot plan took place four years after the earthquake and the Sendai spirit melted the reactor core at the Fukushima nuclear power plant , prompting the Japanese government to declare it closed.
Members of a government agency are monitoring the No. 3 reactor zone at Fukushima Dai-ichi factory.(Photo: AFP.)
As a resource-scarce country, Japan has relied on nuclear energy to supply 25% of its electricity. The Japanese government has restarted two reactors to temporarily meet demand. However, both kilns failed in September 2013, interrupting the power supply for a long time.
Japan has issued stricter safety regulations to avoid repeating the Fukushima disaster , including higher preventive measures and higher barrier walls in vulnerable areas.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet attaches great importance to bringing back about 50 nuclear reactors. Electricity producers also expressed interest in this plan due to the cost of using fossil fuels to ensure too much electricity generation.
" It is important for the government to restart the reactor after confirming the safety. The biggest priority is still safety ," quoted Yahoo on August 9, Yoshihide Suga, the transmitter. High-level language of the Japanese government.
The No.1 reactor at the Sendai nuclear power plant , nearly 1,000 kilometers southwest of Tokyo, was filled with nuclear fuel. As expected, this 31-year-old reactor will reach its maximum capacity at 11 pm today and generate electricity on August 14. But normal activities only start after September.
Some other approved reactors operate again under stricter safety regulations than during the pre-Fukushima disaster period, the worst nuclear incident after the Cherbonyl disaster in Ukraine in 1986. .
- Americans are more cautious with nuclear power after Fukushima
- Radiation in Japan is no longer dangerous
- Japan opened the Fukushima I nuclear reactor reactor
- Japan and Ukraine cooperate to monitor satellites of nuclear disaster areas
- Japan announced a new roadmap to troubleshoot Fukushima I
- Japan can restart the Ohi nuclear reactor
- Fukushima 7 years after nuclear disaster
- Fukushima workers died not because of radiation
- Plants mutated genes because of radiation near Fukushima
- Japan started to respond to nuclear radiation
Japan again shook because of the earthquake At 7 degrees in Japan, at least 2 people were killed Photos of 30 years of disaster Chernobyl nuclear power plant Historic snowstorm on the East Coast of the United States via satellite images Earth buckles under environmental disasters 10 unforgettable photos of atomic bomb explosions Close up of 'shocking' storms Animals met with oil spills