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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Japan's TEPCO to drop nuclear exports: report
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) June 28, 2012


Tokyo Electric Power Co. is to abandon plans to export its nuclear power plant expertise as it struggles to cope with the Fukushima disaster, news reports said Thursday.

The turnaround by one of the world's largest utilities would be a blow to Japan's once-proud policy of promoting its nuclear technology, the Mainichi Shimbun daily said.

Tokyo Electric, known as TEPCO, will withdraw from a scheme to supply and run two nuclear reactors at a plant in Vietnam, the paper said.

The project is being undertaken by International Nuclear Energy Development, a Tokyo-based company set up in 2010 by public funds, heavy machinery makers, and power companies including TEPCO, to promote nuclear power exports.

"Our atomic power engineers still need to do a lot more to stabilise and decommission the reactors" at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi plant, TEPCO president Naomi Hirose said Wednesday according to the Mainichi.

"It is impossible" to abandon the domestic task and promote exports, he was quoted as saying.

TEPCO had been expected to send engineers to the Vietnam plant for operations and maintenance while accepting Vietnamese engineers at its plants, according to Jiji Press news agency.

International Nuclear Energy Development said it had not been informed of any change of plan by TEPCO.

"We have confirmed with Tokyo Electric that it will continue to cooperate in the (Vietnam) project," said an official who declined to be named.

No immediate comment was available from TEPCO.

Tsunami-sparked meltdowns at Fukushima in March 2011 threw Japan into nuclear crisis as leaking reactors polluted vast areas of farmland and forced tens of thousands of people from their homes.

The clean-up is expected to take decades, with scientists warning that some settlements may have to be abandoned.

TEPCO posted a massive 781 billion yen net loss in the fiscal year to March on disaster-related costs, as well as increased imports of fossil fuels to make up for a nuclear power shortfall.

A boisterous shareholders' meeting on Wednesday rubber-stamped the effective nationalisation of the company.

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Record radiation levels detected at Fukushima reactor
Tokyo (AFP) June 27, 2012 - TEPCO, the operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, said Wednesday record amounts of radiation had been detected in the basement of reactor number 1, further hampering clean-up operations.

TEPCO took samples from the basement after lowering a camera and surveying instruments through a drain hole in the basement ceiling.

Radiation levels above radioactive water in the basement reached up to 10,300 millisievert an hour, a dose that will kill humans within a short time after making them sick within minutes.

The annual allowed dose for workers at the stricken site is reached in only 20 seconds.

"Workers cannot enter the site and we must use robots for the demolition," said TEPCO.

The Fukushima operator said that radiation levels were 10 times higher than those recorded at the plant's two other crippled reactors, number two and three.

This was due to the poor state of the nuclear fuel in the reactor compared to that in the two others.

The meltdown at the core of three of Fukushima's six reactors occurred after the March 11, 2011 earthquake and ensuing massive tsunami shut off the power supply and cooling system.

Demolition of the three reactors as well as the plant's number 4 unit is expected to take 40 years and will need the use of new technologies.



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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Slovakia to raise the ante on nuclear shutdown: PM
Bratislava (AFP) June 26, 2012
Slovakia's prime minister said Tuesday he wants more than twice as much EU cash to fully decommission two Soviet-era nuclear reactors that were closed after the country joined the European Union. "We will ask for the already allocated 115 million euros ($143 million) to cover the costs of the decommissioning process to be raised to at least 300 million euros," Robert Fico told journalists in ... read more


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