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Hitachi-GE to Accept Order for Lithuanian
Nuclear Plant
On June 21, the Lithuanian Parliament approved a
construction contract between its government and Hitachi-GE for an ABWR
(1,384 MW).
Construction plans for the Visaginas Nuclear Plant, close to the border
of Latvia and Belarus, aim for completion in 2021. Latvia and
Estonia will also receive electricity and are being requested to bear a
part of the cost burden. It is planned to conclude the official
contract after the investment amounts are approved. Hitachi, the
nuclear plant's operating company has also become an investor, and
should the investment figure for the three countries decrease then
Hitachi's burden will increase. Some of the surrounding countries
also have anti-construction movements, and thus this is a major risk
for Hitachi.
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Demands
for Nuclear Plant Decommissioning: A Succession of Lawsuits
Following the Fukushima nuclear accident, new lawsuits demanding nuclear plant decommissioning are being filed in various areas.
Lawsuits filed this year include: Kyushu Electric's Genkai Nuclear
Plant on January 31, Tokyo Electric's Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Plant
on April 23, Kyushu Electric's Sendai Nuclear Plant on May 30, and
Hokuriku Electric's Shika Nuclear Plant on June 26. It seems as
though lawsuits are about to be filed against all of Japan's nuclear
plants.
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Around
7.5
Million Signatures for Nuclear Phase-out Submitted to Government and
Diet
Eminent writers and critics such as Kenzaburo Oe have
called for a petition named "Goodbye to Nuclear Power Plants", and have
obtained around 7.5 million signatures. The petition was submitted to
both the Chairman of the Lower House on July 12th, and to the Chief
Cabinet Secretary on July 15th. On July 12th, eighty Diet members
participated in a report meeting in the Diet Member's building to
listen to Mr. Oe's appeal.
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New Law Establishes
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
In
NIT Issue 147, News Watch reported that a bill for restructuring
Japan’s nuclear regulatory organizations had been submitted to the
Diet. In the bill, the Nuclear Regulatory Agency was to be
created under the Ministry of the Environment, but the LDP and Komeito
parties submitted a counterproposal stating that there should be a
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The ruling DPJ party met the opposition
parties halfway and withdrew its first plan. The three parties
submitted to the Diet a revised plan based on a new agreement, which
was enacted on June 20. Accompanying this enactment, the
provision "contribute to Japan's national security" was added to the
three laws, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Establishment Act, the
Nuclear Reactor Regulation Law and the Basic Law on Atomic Energy,
raising concerns that this may lead to the abrogation of the principle
of peaceful use of nuclear power.
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Demand for a
Citizens' Referendum Ordinance Fails to Pass
The
demand in Osaka City and the Tokyo metropolis for a citizens'
referendum ordinance for a vote on the restart of nuclear plants was
rejected both in the Osaka Assembly on March 27 and in the Tokyo
Assembly on June 20. At the same time, movements with a similar
claim have started in Shizuoka and Niigata Prefectures. |
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