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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan's TEPCO gets go-ahead for power bill boost
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 19, 2012



The operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant on Thursday was told it could hike household bills by around 8.5 percent, as the president insisted his company was misunderstood by the public.

Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) had wanted to ramp up residential customer bills by more than 10 percent to help pay ballooning costs in the aftermath of the disaster, but was told to rein in its rise.

But hours after winning government approval for the huge hike, TEPCO president Naomi Hirose said the reduced rise would cost the company more than $1 billion a year, and said there was a "perception gap" in the way the utility was seen.

Hirose told journalists at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan he would "do his best" to win back public trust in the vast utility.

"I think that someday in the very near future people -- our customers or society -- will be convinced that TEPCO is changing, TEPCO is moving towards (providing) very positive information," he said.

"It is also important that we, Tokyo Electric Power Co, have to be more conscious... of how our customers and society perceive us."

Hirose, who assumed the presidency in June, added: "I am aware there is a huge perception gap. It is important that the company makes efforts to understand what people are thinking of and what people are needing."

But he added the shortfall between the 10.28 percent price rise that TEPCO had wanted and the 8.47 percent they had been granted by the government would result in a serious burden on the firm.

He said revenue is now expected to shrink by some 80 billion yen ($1.02 billion) per year, in addition to a 40 billion yen loss because of the delay in implementing the price rise.

Hirose also fought back over some of the criticism that has been levelled at his company for its handling of the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl.

In particular, he took aim at a parliamentary report earlier this month that concluded the Fukushima accident was a man-made disaster caused by Japan's culture of "reflexive obedience".

Ingrained collusion between the plant operator, the government and regulators, combined with a lack of any effective oversight, led directly to the worst nuclear accident in a generation, the report said.

"I don't quite understand what facts that finding of collusion is being based on," he said.

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Japan's second reactor restarts
Tokyo (AFP) July 19, 2012 - A second nuclear reactor has begun working in Japan, officials said Thursday, the day after its operator was ordered to examine a possible active tectonic fault directly under the plant.

Kansai Electric Power Co. (KEPCO), which runs the Oi power plant in the nation's industrial heartland, said it switched on Unit No. 4 late Wednesday, following the restart of Unit No. 3 reactor earlier this month.

On Wednesday Japan's nuclear watchdog ordered KEPCO to probe claims that the plant lay on one of the many fault lines that riddle the earthquake-prone country.

The restart comes after tens of thousands of people rallied in Tokyo on Monday demanding an end to nuclear power, the latest in a series of anti-atomic gatherings following the tsunami-sparked disaster at Fukushima last year.

The restarts at Oi ended two months in which Japan was nuclear-free after reactors across the country were shuttered in the aftermath of the Fukushima meltdowns.

In mid-June, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda gave the green light to restart two reactors amid concerns about looming power shortages this summer.

The government has asked business and households to cut back on their power usage by as much as 15 percent from summer levels two years ago.

With the Oi restarts, KEPCO is expected to be able to meet demand for power, even as electricity usage peaks with the increased use of air conditioners over Japan's hot and humid summer, a KEPCO spokesman said.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
UAE to begin constructing two nuclear reactors
Abu Dhabi (AFP) July 18, 2012
The UAE will begin building two of four nuclear power plants in partnership with a South Korean consortium, the first of which will begin production in 2017, the Gulf state announced Wednesday. The Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation (FANR) said it has authorised the construction of the first two reactors in Baraka, west of Abu Dhabi - each with a capacity of 1,400 megawatts. The a ... read more


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