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2011年4月29日星期五

Exec KEPCO sees nuclear setbacks after the crisis of the Japan - Reuters

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Par Cho Mee-young.

SéOUL | Vendredi 29 avril 2011 3 h 56 HAE

Séoul (Reuters) - crise nucléaire du Japon puisse entra?ner un recul de deux ou trois ans sur le marché de réacteur nucléaire, mais la demande augmentera à long terme, un cadre supérieur à la Corée Electric Power Corp a déclaré vendredi.

Pire-sur-record du Japon quake et tsunami le 11 mars paralysa la centrale nucléaire de Fukushima Daiichi, 240 km (150 milles) au nord de Tokyo. Les ingénieurs japonais ont du mal à finir la pire crise nucléaire du monde depuis l'accident de Tchernobyl 1986.

? Crise du Japon peut influer sur le marché dans les deux ou trois prochaines années, mais dans quelques décennies nucléaire demande augmentera en raison d'un manque d'énergie de remplacement, ? Byun Jun-yeon, executive vice president et agent de chef de projet nucléaire au étatiques utilitaire KEPCO, dit dans une interview à Reuters.

Il a dit d'énergies renouvelables continuerait à ne jouer qu'un r?le supplémentaire en raison de son économie pauvre.

Chine semble actuellement être détartrage retour ses plans de centrales nucléaires, mais ne peut pas arrêter, car il est difficile de répondre à leur demande d'énergie énorme sans réacteurs nucléaires, et production d'électricité charbon thermique émet aussi de carbone, "Byun ajouté.

La Chine le mois dernier a gelé approbations nucléaires pour les nouveaux et proposés des centrales nucléaires dans le sillage de la crise du Japon.

PRENANT LE BUT à DES APPELS D'OFFRES à VENIR

Byun, qui s'est spécialisée en ingénierie électrique à l'Université de Corée et KEPCO jointe en 1977, a déclaré que le Brésil, en égypte, en Arabie saoudite, en Argentine et en Afrique du Sud sont préparaient appels d'offres pour les réacteurs nucléaires qui pourraient venir à la fin de cette année.

Il a refusé de discuter des transactions spécifiques, mais ledit KEPCO avait pour but de remporter les appels d'offres et l'Arabie saoudite ont évalué les technologies de fonctionnement du KEPCO réacteur hautement comparés avec d'autres pays.

? Importateurs de réacteur veulent modèles qui garantie la sécurité, l'économie et l'efficacité énergétique... elles veulent aussi des constructeurs qui peuvent les aider à exécuter des réacteurs au moins 20 à 30 ans plus tard, ? a déclaré Byun.

? En Corée du Sud n'a aucune mention de l'accident dans son histoire de fonctionnement du réacteur de près de 40 ans ?, dit-il.

KEPCO a été visant à gagner les ordres outre-mer pour un total de 10 réacteurs nucléaires d'ici 2020. Les émirats arabes Unis en décembre 2009 attribué un contrat de 20 milliards de dollars pour construire quatre réacteurs de 1 400 MW, le plus grand deal énergétique au Moyen-Orient, à un consortium coréen a conduit la KEPCO. (Won coréen $1 = 1073.400)

(édition par Jonathan Hopfner et Michael Urquhart)


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2011年4月24日星期日

Advisor of said Japan decline of the nuclear threat: report - AFP

Advisor of said Japan decline of the nuclear threat: report (AFP) - 4 hours ago

TOKYO - The Japanese Advisor special of the Prime Minister on nuclear crisis says that the immediate risk of a leak of major radiation of the power plant of Fukushima decreased, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The Government could not say the situation had been completely stabilized at the factory, but after studying the possibility of a serious deterioration Tokyo was comfortable with the current of the evacuation policy, Goshi Hosono said the paper in an interview on Saturday.

"There is no way Tokyo or Kyoto will be in danger," said Hosono, Special Adviser to the Prime Minister Naoto Kan on the management of the nuclear crisis.

The atomic plant, where the reactor cooling systems have been eliminated, was struck by a series of explosions and radiation leak in the air, ground and sea in the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl world 25 years ago.

The Government imposed a 20 kilometre (12 mile) exclusion zone around the plant, giving legal weight to an exclusion zone for fear of the effect of exposure to radiation on residents long term last week.

More than 85,000 people have left for shelter areas around the plant, including a wider zone of 30 km, where people were said to remain in the Interior and later urged to leave.

Hosono said of the levels of radiation in damaged reactors must be lowered before work would be carried out, and they had to find ways to treat the water contaminated by radiation of efforts to cool the reactors and spent fuel rod pool.

Workers poured thousands of tons of radioactive water at low altitude, in the Pacific Ocean, the concern of contamination of the marine environment concerned neighbouring countries.

"Our objective is very clear: preventing the spread more radiation in the atmosphere and the ocean,"Hosono told the paper."."

"To achieve this, we need to restore stable cooling functions." It is technically extremely difficult. ?

Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company, said that he does not expect a "cold shutdown" of all the reactors for another period of six to nine months.

Hosono said officials had begun to examine the causes and treatment of the nuclear accident.

"When we look at the accident, it will naturally become clear where the problems were, including issues with the Japan nuclear regulatory policy," he told the paper.

Hosono, Member of the Democratic Party of the Japan to power said that it was not the right time to decide whether the country should turn to non-nuclear energy sources or continue to continue to use atomic power.

I just don ' t think we can make a judgment dispassionate in the current atmosphere, "the cited book telling him."

"For the moment, we must maintain options and let the people decide in time".

DPJ Secretary General Katsuya Okada Friday, said the Government would review its policy of energy in the light of the disaster, but could be established with nuclear energy.

Japan poor in resources, very dependent on oil from the Middle East, brings about a third of its energy needs, nuclear power, but its high-tech companies are also world leaders in numerous environmental and energy technologies.

Copyright ? AFP 2011. All rights reserved. "More".

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2011年4月21日星期四

Japan said the zone of exclusion nuclear plant - Associated Press

Japan said the exclusion zone around the plant (PA) nuclear - 48 minutes ago

TOKYO (AP) - Japan declared a zone of 12 miles (20 kilometres) to evacuate around its plant tsunami-crippled nuclear a zone of exclusion Thursday, urging residents to comply with the order in the interest of their own safety.

Secretary General, said Yukio Edano Government order took effect at midnight, was intended to prevent the unrestricted entrance in the mainly desert zone ordered evacuated after the tsunami and earthquake in the month last sinking of power of the plant in Fukushima Dai-ichi and cooling systems.

He gave no details of penalties for violating the order.

"We beseech the understanding of residents." We really want to residents not to enter the areas, "said Edano. "Unfortunately, he y still some people in the fields."

Officials, said that the order was intended to limit exposure to radiation from leaking from the plant and to control the entry to prevent theft.

Edano said authorities would arrange for residents to return for about two hours collecting the assets needed brief visits. Residents must go through radiation screening, he said.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan was visiting the region Thursday to meet with local officials and evacuees to discuss plans for the strict application of the evacuation zone.

Residents of almost of all the area around 80,000 left when the area was evacuated on March 12, but some were his return and police could not legally block.

Copyright ? 2011 the Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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The Canadian to be reviewed nuclear power safety


The Canada has five nuclear power plants in different States of operation.

The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission has established a working group to assess the impact of operational, technical and regulatory of the nuclear disaster at the Japan for the Canadian plants.

Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex was severely damaged by the March 11 earthquake and the tsunami that hit the northeastern coast of the Japan and continues to release radiation into the environment as officers work desperately to get the reactors under control.

Canada geese stand near Ontario Hydro's Pickering nuclear power station. Ontario Hydro is the largest power utility in North America.The geese of the standing Canada near Pickering Ontario Hydro nuclear power station. Ontario Hydro is the most important power in North America. Andy Clark/Reuters.

The Canadian commission has decided to implement the Working Group at its meeting of March 30.

"The members of the Working Group will examine the responses of the licensees at the request of CNSC information under subsection 12 (2) the General nuclear safety and regulation of review to review the respective cases of the safety of their nuclear installations."", underlying in-depth defence against externesscénarios of serious accidents and guidelines and emergency procedures," said a press release of the CNSC.

The Canada has seven nuclear power plants located at five locations in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick.

Employment of the Working Group will be recommending short and long term measures to address Canadian nuclear Central significant deficiencies and determine if design changes are necessary.

The crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is seen in this photo released by Tokyo Electric Power Co. on April 14. The utility giant is still working on a plan to end the country's nuclear crisis a month after it began.The Fukushima Daiichi crippled nuclear plant sees this picture Tokyo Electric Power Co., exit on April 14. The utility giant still works on a plan to end the nuclear crisis a month after the start. Tokyo Electric Power Co./Reuters

The Working Group recommends that, if appropriate, potential changes in regulatory requirements, for inspection and programs policies for CANDU reactors and for potential new nuclear power plants, according to the release of the commission.

Members will also determine priorities for the implementation of corrective actions based on lessons learned and the need, if any, for further examination. The Working Group will present its findings to the commission at a public forum, even if the date has not yet been decided.

The Working Group will be chaired by Greg Rzentkowski, the Director-General of regulation of nuclear power, and members will consist of senior experts in the design of the reactor, security assessment and the emergency preparedness and response.

The most recent accident at a Canadian nuclear power plant was in mid-March when 73 000 litres of water demineralized leak in Lake Ontario of the Pickering a nuclear power plant.

Ontario Power Generation, which operates the plant, located 35 kilometres east of Toronto, told the CNSC that seal of pump failure was the cause.

Ontario Power Generation, said that the risk was minimal, but that these leaks are not supposed to happen.

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2011年4月20日星期三

updatedJapan may prohibit access nuclear plant - CBC.ca

The Japan plans to prohibit access to the area evacuated around a nuclear plant damaged in the month last earthquake and tsunami.

Up to 80,000 people lived in the area of 20 km around Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plants, but almost all of them have left.

However, a few people have been back to check their home, despite the police.

The nuclear power plant has been leaks radiation since its cooling system has been damaged in the earthquake on March 11 and the subsequent tsunami.

Now, officials are indicating for the first time that the area around the plant can be concluded.

"We are considering implementation areas of caution as an option to limit effectively the entry," said the Secretary General of Government Yukio Edano.

He said that Prime Minister Naoto Kan will discuss the closure when he travels in the region to meet with local officials Thursday. Kan will also visit a nuclear crisis management centre.

Noriyuki Shikata, Member of Edano, said more details on how the access could be controlled are still developed.

"There are a number of people who can enter the area." Under the current regime, we are not able to enforce legally - there is no penalty for entering in the box. There is awareness of the need for a stronger application of the region, said Shikata.

Also, Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of the nuclear power plant, said Wednesday that it distributes compensation claims for people forced to leave the region. The company offers approximately 12 000 US $ per person in initial compensation.

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Japan may prohibit access nuclear plant

The Japan plans to prohibit access to the area evacuated around a nuclear plant damaged in the month last earthquake and tsunami.

Up to 80,000 people lived in the area of 20 km around Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plants, but almost all of them have left.

However, a few people have been back to check their home, despite the police.

The nuclear power plant has been leaks radiation since its cooling system has been damaged in the earthquake on March 11 and the subsequent tsunami.

Now, officials are indicating for the first time that the area around the plant can be concluded.

"We are considering implementation areas of caution as an option to limit effectively the entry," said the Secretary General of Government Yukio Edano.

He said that Prime Minister Naoto Kan will discuss the closure when he travels in the region to meet with local officials Thursday. Kan will also visit a nuclear crisis management centre.

Noriyuki Shikata, Member of Edano, said more details on how the access could be controlled are still developed.

"There are a number of people who can enter the area." Under the current regime, we are not able to enforce legally - there is no penalty for entering in the box. There is awareness of the need for a stronger application of the region, said Shikata.

Also, Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of the nuclear power plant, said Wednesday that it distributes compensation claims for people forced to leave the region. The company offers approximately 12 000 US $ per person in initial compensation.

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2011年4月14日星期四

Japanese researchers closer to moving plant nuclear

A new glitch in the cooling of spent nuclear plant fuel crippled the Japan has prompted a surge of radiation, but a general decline in leaks allowed police Thursday to search for missing of the victims of the tsunami more closely to the complex than ever before.

Pickled protective policing a radius of 10 kilometres on the Fukushima Daiichi for the first time Thursday in their search for thousands of missing victims even after the March 11 earthquake and the tsunami.

A steel fence is installed to cover a gate to prevent the spread of radioactive water at an intake canal at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in this photo taken Tuesday. A steel fence is installed to cover a door to prevent the spread of radioactive water in the canal of contribution to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power in this photo taken Tuesday. TEPCO/Reuters "we must work very carefully to avoid rip our combinations of radiation with debris, metal and pieces of concrete scattered around the area" a police officer who gave only his nickname, Sato, said in a telephone interview.

Although Japanese authorities have insisted that the improvement of the situation to the crippled plant, the crisis has dragged on, accompanied by a nearly nonstop series of misadventures and replicas of the 9.0 magnitude earthquake that hampered debris clearing work and restoring the plant disabled cooling systems.

A Japan recognized this week the total radioactivity of leak already has catapulted the crisis in the greater severity internationally, on an equal footing with Chernobyl, although always involving only one-tenth of the radioactivity emitted in this disaster of 1986.

Police in white suit, delicately picked through rubble near the plant in an area where up to 1,000 organizations would be filed in tsunami debris, said Sato. Overall, more than 26 000 people would have died on 11 March, although only approximately 11,250 bodies have been recovered so far.

"Many families have asked for their close disappeared." I want to recover the body as quickly as possible and to return to their families, "says.

Glitch this week at the plant involved falling levels of water in the pool for the bars of irradiated fuel in the building of reactor unit 4.

Water sprayed inadvertently in a tank overflow prompted a false that the main pool was full when he was not reading. That prompted the workers to suspend the injection water in the main basin for several days until Wednesday, when resumption of spraying.

Also, strong aftershocks could affect reading, said responsible.

The suspension of spraying allowed temperature and radiation levels to rise, if rods were believed still to be covered with water, said Hidehiko Nishiyama Japanese nuclear and industrial safety agency.

"I believe that the fuel in the pool bars are largely intact, or to keep the normal form of what they should look like," said Nishiyama. "If they were fully involved, we would have considered different sets of numbers of sampling water."

A new burst of radiation leaks this week in the pool of fuel of Unit 4 suggests damage to the fuel rods and complicates efforts to stabilize the said officials. TEPCO Manager Junichi Matsumoto, has said the analysis of the water of the swimming pool has detected higher levels of radioactive iodine 131, cesium-134 and caesium-137. Normally, these elements would not be found in the swimming pool.

Three of the reactors have also approximately 20,000 metric tonnes of stagnant water, contaminated by radiation and it is difficult to reduce spilling reactors, Nishiyama said.

Workers operate a modified Putzmeister 70Z, the world's largest concrete pump mounted on a truck, to pump contaminated water from the No.4 reactor at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant .Workers operate a modified Putzmeister 70Z, most large concrete pump mounted on a truck, world for pumping contaminated water from the reactor No. 4 at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power. TEPCO/ReutersUntil cooling systems can be fully restored, flooding the engines with water are the only way to prevent overheating, but these many tons of water, of radioactivity, are a distinct threat.

"This is the problem to be stuck with reactors which must constantly be fed with water", Nishiyama said. Setbacks in the preparation of the tanks for storing contaminated water mean new options can be considered, he said. It was not specified.

The operator of plant at Bay, Tokyo Electric Power Co., or TEPCO, is looking for ways to finally remove fuel rods from storage pools reactor that the plant is closed for good. The unit 4 glitch makes these more urgent plans.

Finally the stems must be stored permanently in dry casks, radiation-resistant, but this process is far away, he said.

Meanwhile, TEPCO, works to stabilize conditions at the No. 1 engine of the plant by pumping of nitrogen in its containment vessel to reduce the risk of explosion of hydrogen. He is also install plates of steel and the screens of silt along the coast to help reduce radiation leaks into the sea.

Hesitant progress at the plant have deepened the misery of residents who were forced to leave their homes and jobs near Fukushima Daiichi.

A 102-year-old man committed suicide Tuesday, a day after the Government includes Iitate village where he lived all his life, as an area to be evacuated to avoid exposure to radiation. A local police official, who refused to be named because he was not allowed to speak to the media, confirmed the man had killed himself but would give no further details.

About 140,000 people still live in shelters after losing their homes or be advised to evacuate their nuclear crisis and disaster on 11 March.

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2011年4月12日星期二

Nuclear fears keep shippers are wary of a trip to the Japan - Reuters

Foreign crews are reluctant to go to Tokyo Bay

* Shippers being obliged to use ships to the Japan

* Japan exec urges countries not steps to respond to the crisis

Randy Fabi and Harry Suhartono

(Singapore, April 13, Reuters) - foreign crew members remain reluctant to travel nearly quake-crippled nuclear power Japan, including some ports outside the exclusion zone, forcing shippers to use rather Japanese vessels to transport goods, executives of the industrysaid.

The shipping companies have been providing members of the crew travelling in the area of Tokyo Bay, located 240 km (150 miles) of the damaged nuclear complex the Fukushima, with special anti-radar costumes, Geiger counters and medicine.

This was despite daily insurance of the Department of transportation of the Japan that radiation levels in the region, which included major container ports, Tokyo and Yokohama, and the oil port of Chiba were at a level "very safe".

"The crews do not want to go there." Same Chiba, crews are not yet determined to go, "Kyuho Whang, CEO of SK Shipping South Korea, said to journalists at a Conference of the Singapore industry.

"If they rely more on Japanese ships that foreign ships."

Whang did not say which companies were forced to use Japanese ships.

NOT YET VERY WIDESPREAD

The use of vessels flying the Japanese flag was not yet very widespread, but a senior executive, who wished not to be named, it could become commonplace if more in more foreign, said shipping crews decided against travelling to the region.

"We had ships going to the Japan since the tsunami," said Morten Arntzen, President of the overseas Shipholding Group U.S. appearing on the list.

"The captain of the ship has full authority to say that we will not y and that authority will not second guessed.".

Japan limited marine traffic 30 km of the nuclear power plant in Fukushima, 80 km while many shipping companies have imposed a minimum exclusion zone.


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The Japan PM asks urges calm as raised nuclear level

Prime Minister urges public not to panic after the Government boosted the level of severity of the crisis in a nuclear power plant it in the damaged by the tsunami to the highest rating - on an equal footing with the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan urged people in a television address to focus on the recovery of the disaster of the country.

He said "Right now, the situation of the nuclear reactor at the Fukushima plant has been stabilizing step by step". "The amount of radiation leaks is declining." "But we are not at the stage but where we can let our guard."

Japanese regulators said that they raised the rating of five to seven after new leaks of radiation of the Fukushima Daiichi plant assessments.

Monitoring of nuclear power in the country, said that, while the stricken plant radiation emission rate is only about 10 percent of this output to Chernobyl, the crippled Japanese facility issued still an enormous amount of radioactive substances that pose a risk over a large area.

So far, the Chernobyl disaster, in Ukraine was the only event assessed at level 7. The crisis of Fukushima was evaluated previously at level 5, the same as the incident at Three Mile Island 1979 in Pennsylvania.

Although the upgrade was spectacular, two - Fukushima and Chernobyl - disasters are not that similar, experts say that.

Chernobyl, it was the heart of the reactor itself exploded, releasing an enormous amount of radioactive material in a very short time. Fukushima had a less critical hydrogen explosion. And the total amount of the radioactive particles released so far seems to be only a small fraction of that observed in Ukraine.

Japan nuclear agency official Hidehiko Nishiyama said 29 people had died of acute radiation at Chernobyl, but no there were no fatal to Fukushima radiation losses.

The upgrade has at least two new earthquakes with a magnitude of Japan hit Northeast 6.0 Monday evening and Tuesday morning. The region was rocked by numerous aftershocks since then. Up to what the subducting plate moved in position, all quake in the area of rupture-- in this case, 300 kilometres long by 150 kilometres wide on the coast of the Japan which is less force that the initial earthquake is regarded as a rebuttal.

Workers operate a modified Putzmeister 70Z, the world's largest concrete pump mounted on a truck, to pump contaminated water from Unit 4 at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant Tuesday. Workers operate world mounted on a truck, a modified Putzmeister 70Z, most large concrete pump to pump water contaminated unit 4 of the nuclear power plant in Fukushima Daiichi Tuesday. (Tokyo Electric Power Co./Associated Press)

It is believed that the 9.0 magnitude 11 March earthquake and the tsunami, that it has generated have caused damage of $ 310 billion. Japanese officials have updated the balance sheet of the victims of the disaster of 13,219 people. More than 14,000 others are still missing and more than 145 000 people living in the centres of evacuation across the country.

Fukushima Daiichi plant was spewing radiation since disasters and even a month, officials say they don't know how long it will take to cool reactors there.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao expressed concern Tuesday radiation reaches the ocean. He told his Japanese counterpart that the country must seriously examine the effects on the marine environment and the neighbours of the Japan.

He also reminded Prime Minister the it must strictly respect international law and the question of full reports in China.

In a gesture without report with replicas of Monday, the Japanese Government is expanding the area to evacuate around the plant 30 kilometres from 20, citing the risks of the cumulative radiation exposure.

The most recent calculations of the Japan Nuclear Safety Commission found that a zone stretching 60 kilometres north of the nuclear power plant and 40 kilometres to the South were, in the month since the earthquake, have been exposed to radiation equivalent to the annual dose limit. In the old zone of 20 kilometres of evacuation, the radiation exposure has reached up to 100 times the annual limit.

The factory itself, the Tokyo Electric Power Co., known as TEPCO, has resumed efforts to contain the radioactive leak of the plant, after a delay of one day because of strong aftershocks.

TEPCO will begin pumping contaminated water from the reactor No. 2 of Tuesday and transfer to a condenser, after verification of the safety equipment.

The radioactive water was impeding the work to restore the functions of cooling in the damaged reactors. He also resumed by injection of nitrogen, in the containment of the reactor No.1 vase late in the night of Monday said TEPCO. Which aims to prevent other explosions of hydrogen.

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2011年4月10日星期日

Salary of the McDonald for nuclear employment shows Japan cities can fade

April 10, 2011, 10: 42 am EDT by John Brinsley and Aki Ito

(Updates casualty tolls at paragraph 20).

April 11 (Bloomberg) - a week before become ground zero for most of the world since 1986 nuclear crisis, the plant in Fukushima Dai-Ichi offered $ 11 per hour for maintenance work full time in a area of Japan which was lagging even before the tsunami and the earthquake last month hit.The wage, the same as the country of Corp. to work part-time at Tokyo McDonald, demonstrates the magnitude of the economic blight in the Northern Tohoku region and indicates the cities may never recover from the disaster. Some 28 000 people are dead or missing and 150,000 are homeless in Tohoku, where 25% of the population is 65 years of age or more and job seekers than jobs by two to one.Once rescue and clean-up is complete, Government of Prime Minister Naoto Kan must decide whether to rebuild houses, roads, and businesses or move tens of thousands of people. The challenge: structuring investment plans to bring private jobs beyond the bump in short-term public works. "Very roughly put, it will not many people left in these communities,"Special Advisor to Takayoshi Igarashi, Kan on the decline of the population and the rural disintegration, said in an interview. "Elderly will go far and youth will certainly leave for Tokyo." The Government is now facing the choice of whether to invest in the reconstruction of these regions or leaving this terrible. "The successive Governments and Tokyo Electric Power Co. contributed money in the construction of bridges, roads and soccer stadiums in places like the town of Ohkuma of Fukushima, who has failed to revive economies in Northeast, said Daniel Aldrich, author of ' Site fights: divisive facilities and civil society to the Japan and to the West. "The problem with these"empty zone projects", it is that they temporarily create construction jobs evaporate when the work is done, he said. "Exponentially earthquake of magnitude 9 Higher'The and waves as high as 15 m (49 ft) damaged or destroyed more than 200,000 buildings and levelled whole cities in the northeast of the Japan. Sony Corp., Toyota Motor Corp. and Sapporo Holdings Ltd. are among the companies which have closed plant damage that estimates of the Government is as high as 25 billion yen ($295 billion).Igarashi said that Japan should "at least" 20 billion yen to rebuild the area. If residents evacuated nearly of the nuclear power cannot return, the amount of necessary expenses "will be exponentially greater," he said.The disaster struck an economy already mired in its second decade of stagnation and deflation. The Japan national debt is twice the size of the gross domestic product, the result of the soaring costs of welfare and the decline in revenue. The benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock average has fallen 6.4 per cent since March 10, the day before the disaster struck.Six prefectures of VegetablesTohoku contaminated, with a population of approximately $ 9 million, have an average income per capita of 2.6 million yen, 15% lower than the average national. In the Prefecture of Aomori, in addition to the North, population fell by 4.4% between 2005 and 2010, the second largest drop, in the country as young Japanese left to find work in major cities.Radiation emitted by the Fukushima complex approximately 220 kilometres (137 miles) North of Tokyo has contaminated vegetables and seafood in Tohoku, which depends on agriculture, fishing and manufacturing. Spinach and deliveries of milk have been limited in the region that represents more than a quarter of the Japan rice production. Cobalt, cesium, radioactive iodine was found in the sea nearby.Secretary General of the Government Yukio Edano said April 1, that the evacuation of residents near the plant could be "in the long term."The low-skilled jobs, "the biggest problem is that of nuclear power," said Itsunori Onodera, a legislator with the opposition of the Liberal Democratic Party, whose hometown of Kesennuma was ravaged by the tsunami. "If the area of nuclear contamination spreads, people do live there and that there will no be no reconstruction."Most of the jobs in the region requires no university degrees or advanced training, Aldrich said. Executives who work in the region come from Tokyo and home on weekends and some cities in the 1980s, had several schools have consolidated a.Three of the prefectures - Miyagi, Iwate and Fukushima - 99 per cent of the victims of the disaster. Kesennuma had a population of 74 000 pre-quake. Now, 2,120 people are dead or missing and 8,897 are in evacuation centers, according to the website of the city.Pledged to democratic party CooperationThe power of Japan and the opposition are engaged to work in the financing of recovery and the administration plans to create a reconstruction agency to oversee the reconstruction effort. Kan, said the first package of spending to cope with the relief and reconstruction will be compiled this month, without giving details. He promised that farmers will be reimbursed for their losses and promised "full-scale restoration" of the region.Edano said April 7 that an initial package of spending could be as much as 4 billion yen. The opposition Liberal Democratic Party called for an effort of 5 billion yen, about $ 5 billion more 1997 rescue the Korea of the Sud.La disaster has also created an opportunity to rebuild parts of Tohoku, experts say. The first priority will be be housing for those who have lost their homes, said Itsuki Nakabayashi, a Professor of engineering at Tokyo Metropolitan University, which specializes in disaster recovery and mitigation. After that, the Government should consider tax cuts and other incentives to attract companies in the region, he said.A new airport to Sendai and best links road and telecommunication are experts say will allow the region to rejuvenate. "More attractive Tohoku'"Here is a tremendous opportunity to create a more attractive Tohoku, away from the State of concrete,"said Robert Mason, expert in environmental policy at the Temple University in Philadelphia, who lived in the Japan and studied its spread. "What is required is a measured approach of ' what should we rebuild, where we must rebuild?" "The DPJ's kan in 2009 beats the LDP, which governed Japan almost without interruption in the post-war period in part by denouncing the support of the LDP for projects that have benefited from the construction of public works industry." Reconstruction of the Tohoku with a view towards sustainability could be a way for Kan to realize its promise to campaign "concrete people." "Unless you build new industries and in the long term, children will leave," said Aldrich. "The long-term problem is that many incentives provided have been these infrastructure projects, and they were not thinking about how to revive these economies."

-With the help of Takashi Hirokawa, Kanoko Matsuyama, Patrick Harrington and Sachiko Sakamaki in Tokyo. Editors: Peter Hirschberg, Patrick Harrington

To contact the reporters on this story: John Brinsley in Tokyo at the jbrinsley@bloomberg.net; Aki Ito in Tokyo at the aito16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg to phirschberg@bloomberg.net


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2011年4月9日星期六

Abu Dhabi plans to go nuclear

By Anthony DiPaola

(Corrects place of Bruce Smith of employment).

Even when radiation leaks from paralyzed to Fukushima plant, China in the Middle East countries are moving ahead with nuclear energy. March 28, Abu Dhabi has confirmed that it would proceed with plans for a civilian reactor despite the Japan disaster. "It is a technology that we bring to the region," said Abdulla Saif al-Nuaimi, Director General of the Abu Dhabi Water & Electricity Authority, when the Arabian Power & water Summit. Nuclear remains the most realistic option, said Jarmo Kotilaine, Chief Economist at the National Commercial Bank in Saudi Arabia: "" it's competitive, addresses some of the environmental risks involved in burning crude and can be built on a large scale. ""

Abu Dhabi power demand rises to about 10% per year, and nuclear energy is needed to help offset a lack of natural gas to burn in new generators, al-Nuaimi said: "with a shortage of gas iciNous must find other ways to produce energy." Plans are a reactor to be operational in 2017.

Efforts to increase the power of sources such as solar are not likely to be sufficient to meet the demand. The rise to generate approximately 7% of its power from renewable energy by 2020. This would require 1,500 megawatts of projects such as wind and solar power plants, says Bruce Smith, Adviser to the Abu Dhabi Water & Electricity Authority.

Saudi Arabia is facing, rapidly rising demand with domestic electricity needs of growth which is two times faster than its economy. By 2020, it plans to have spent more than 100 billion on power plants and distribution networks, with about one-third will plants and the rest to the national grid, said Abdullah al-Shehri, Governor of Electricity & cogeneration Regulatory Authority Saudi Arabia. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has recently ordered 500,000 new built homes that the Government is trying to prevent problems, which will add to the growing demand for electricity. The Kingdom also seeks to sources such as solar and nuclear power plants to boost energy production.

The bottom line: Far from backing away from nuclear energy, Abu Dhabi plans to construct its first civil nuclear plant to meet growing energy demand.

DiPaola is a reporter for Bloomberg News.

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