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© KYODOReactor in Japan's 2011 disaster area halted just days after restart
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PTownsend
The disaster is another reminder that Japan and most other countries need to rethink whether to continue having large-scale centralized entities control electrical power and distribution, or instead find alternatives including assisting individuals and local entities (e.g. public utility districts, found in some parts of the world) to become better able to become more self-reliant when it comes to how electricity is generated and used.
dobre vam zajebava
better be safe than sorry...
sakurasuki
Here we go
JeffLee
Sounds like a basic blunder. Yikes.
gogogo
This plant was literally hit by a tsunami, yet it is safe to operate?
It sits next to the ocean? How can this plant be safe?
Chabbawanga
Good news
Albert
@sakurasuki
Your comments have no meaning.
If you know better then use this knowledge but I guess you are just someone putting comments without meaning.
didou
Common technical issue, I believe.
Al plants restarting after a long shut down do face small technical issues. It was just the start of the ramp-up period
wallace
The Onagawa plant had the full force of the earthquake and the tsunami. The rectors went into shutdown and there were zero problems with the plant. A contrast to the Fukushima plant which suffered a serious nuclear disaster purely because of the lack of the necessary safety features.
iron man
Please let them do the safety stuffs, they are being open and honest. Ps, most power stations now are situated on shorelines, the old, not so productive plants adjacent to rivers are being... reverted to rubble. More energy production = more cooling water.
wallace
All of the nuclear power plants are on the sea.
nandakandamanda
The 13-meter tsunami was stopped by the sea wall at Onagawa, and only a small amount flowed over the top, so that was indeed very lucky, and internal damage was minimal.
PS No idea who Sakurasaki is quoting above with, "Here we go".
Hideomi Kuze
in the first place, present Japan's nuclear regulation itself what learn nothing from lesson of Fukushima nuclear disaster, permit to restart nuclear plants without even inspecting practicability of evacuation plans is wrong.
nandakandamanda
"More stringent safety tests" included stress testing, which sounds impressive but which was only a series of simulated computer tests.
Sanjinosebleed
Accidents waiting to happen! Shut all clear down now!
nandakandamanda
Recommendation for those who gave me two minus points above, read the Onagawa NPP report on Wiki, especially the parts concerning effects of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Thank you.
wallace
The power companies spent about ¥15 trillion updating the safety of about 20 reactors.
wanderlust
Not many 40 year old cars on the road, and those that are have stringent shakken test every 2 years.
Nuclear power plants - 40 years old - 'upgraded' with a few hundred thousand tons of concrete barriers, and they are good for another twenty years!
TrafficCone
Bad news: we’re gonna start cranking them out like sausages.
we’re not able to curb our desire for electricity.
unless you’re willing to start washing your clothes by hand and sending your messages by carrier pigeon
ian
They wouldn't be doing this if fusion can be realistically realized in the foreseeable future