12 December 2012 | 10:36

Japan utilities dive on atomic plant shutdown fears

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Shares in Japanese power companies plunged Tuesday after a panel of experts said one of the nation's nuclear plants may sit over an active seismic fault, raising fears it would have to be scrapped, AFP reports. Experts tasked by the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) with investigating the tectonic situation under the Tsuruga plant in central Fukui prefecture said Monday that it showed signs of geologically recent movement. "Active" faults are those that, amongst other things, have moved within the past 120,000-130,000 years. Under government guidelines atomic installations cannot be sited on a fault if it is still classed as active. If the regulatory body formally decides that the Tsuruga plant, which houses two reactors on the Sea of Japan (East Sea) coast, is sitting above active faults, it is likely to be decommissioned. The news sent Kansai Electric Power, which supplies power across western Japan, tumbling 6.44 percent to 726 yen by the break on the Tokyo Stock Exchange while Chubu Electric Power fell 5.71 percent to 1,023 yen. Tokyo Electric Power, operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi plant that was at the centre of Japan's atomic crisis last year, eased 2.14 percent to 137 yen. Japan Atomic Power, the operator of the Tsuruga plant, is not publicly listed, but it is co-owned by listed utilities whose shares also fell. "There is a risk of power companies needing to inject capital into (Japan Atomic Power) to help it pay the costs of decommissioning," a Japanese equity strategist told Dow Jones Newswires. All but two of Japan's 50 nuclear reactors remain offline after they were shuttered for regular safety checks in the aftermath of the 2011 crisis at Fukushima, when a huge tsunami generated by an earthquake caused meltdowns. The NRA is also set to conduct inspections at five other plants to see if they sit on active faults, including the Oi nuclear facility, Japan's only working atomic power plant which is also in western Japan. Hundreds of thousands of people were made homeless by the Fukushima accident and tracts of prime agricultural land were left unfarmable. Anti-nuclear sentiment is running high in Japan, which used to rely on the technology for around a third of its electricity needs.

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Shares in Japanese power companies plunged Tuesday after a panel of experts said one of the nation's nuclear plants may sit over an active seismic fault, raising fears it would have to be scrapped, AFP reports. Experts tasked by the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) with investigating the tectonic situation under the Tsuruga plant in central Fukui prefecture said Monday that it showed signs of geologically recent movement. "Active" faults are those that, amongst other things, have moved within the past 120,000-130,000 years. Under government guidelines atomic installations cannot be sited on a fault if it is still classed as active. If the regulatory body formally decides that the Tsuruga plant, which houses two reactors on the Sea of Japan (East Sea) coast, is sitting above active faults, it is likely to be decommissioned. The news sent Kansai Electric Power, which supplies power across western Japan, tumbling 6.44 percent to 726 yen by the break on the Tokyo Stock Exchange while Chubu Electric Power fell 5.71 percent to 1,023 yen. Tokyo Electric Power, operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi plant that was at the centre of Japan's atomic crisis last year, eased 2.14 percent to 137 yen. Japan Atomic Power, the operator of the Tsuruga plant, is not publicly listed, but it is co-owned by listed utilities whose shares also fell. "There is a risk of power companies needing to inject capital into (Japan Atomic Power) to help it pay the costs of decommissioning," a Japanese equity strategist told Dow Jones Newswires. All but two of Japan's 50 nuclear reactors remain offline after they were shuttered for regular safety checks in the aftermath of the 2011 crisis at Fukushima, when a huge tsunami generated by an earthquake caused meltdowns. The NRA is also set to conduct inspections at five other plants to see if they sit on active faults, including the Oi nuclear facility, Japan's only working atomic power plant which is also in western Japan. Hundreds of thousands of people were made homeless by the Fukushima accident and tracts of prime agricultural land were left unfarmable. Anti-nuclear sentiment is running high in Japan, which used to rely on the technology for around a third of its electricity needs.
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