TOKYO: Japan is set to go without nuclear energy
for the first time since 1970 from Saturday, when the last operating reactor
shuts down for maintenance, heightening fears of a looming power crunch this
summer.
Only
one of Japan's 50 reactors -- at the Tomari nuclear plant in northernmost
Hokkaido -- is operating at present, but it is scheduled to stop for
maintenance work which will last more than 70 days.
Resource-hungry
Japan relied on nuclear energy for about one-third of its electricity demand
until a massive earthquake and tsunami in March last year caused reactor
meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Since
the disaster there has been lingering public distrust over nuclear energy and
all but the one reactor at the Tomari plant are suspended for extra safety
checks.
Workers
at the Tomari plant will move the control rod into reactor No. 3 at about
5:00pm (0800 GMT) on Saturday, which will lower power generation to zero, a
spokesman at Hokkaido Electric Power Co. (HEPCO) said.
The
long-term future of the reactor -- and Japan's nuclear energy policy -- remains
uncertain.
The
government of Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has said two of the offline units
at the Oi nuclear power plant, western Japan, are safe enough to restart and
that they could help prevent power shortages in the hot summer months.
But it
remains unclear if or when the government will gain approval from regional
authorities to resume the reactors.
The Oi
plant's operator, Kansai Electric Power, which supplies mid-western Japan,
including the commercial hubs of Osaka, Kyoto and Kobe, has said it could face
an electricity shortfall of almost 20 per cent if temperatures soar in July.
And the
utility said it could remain up to 16 per cent short in August as increased air
conditioner usage zaps the electricity produced by its thermal fuel plants.
Kyushu
Electric Power, covering an area further west, as well as HEPCO in the north,
also said they will not be able to meet summer demand without nuclear energy.
Increased
use of thermal fuel plants hikes costs for utility firms, as well as greenhouse
gas emissions for the country.
Critics
of atomic energy point to continuing efficiencies that have allowed the world's
third largest economy to all but shrug off previous dire warnings of shortages.
A
series of anti-nuclear power demonstrations are planned on Saturday, the
Children's Day national holiday in Japan, calling for a safer future for
younger generations.
- AFP/
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