Japan’s Regulator to Review Reactor Restart Requests, Formulate New Severe Accident Regulations
Japan’s Regulator to Review Reactor Restart Requests, Formulate New Severe Accident Regulations
Industry/Regulatory/Political
- The five commissioners heading Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority
(NRA) unanimously agreed last week to formulate new severe accident
regulations for nuclear energy facilities, in line with the country’s
atomic energy law that parliament amended in June. Accident scenarios to
be covered will include terrorist actions as well as earthquakes and
tsunamis. The NRA said draft regulations will be available for public
comment March 2013 and are to be finalized by July. Two sets of final
regulations are to be drawn up, to include plant system design
considerations and severe accident management procedures.
- The NRA announced that its reviews of reactor restart requests will
include technical safety assessments and briefings of local government
authorities. However, the agency’s commissioners said it would leave it
to plant operators to persuade local governments to accept the plant
restarts. The safety assessments will be based on guidelines to be
developed using international and national standards —such as those of
the IAEA, Finland, France and the United States—and issued by July 2013.
- The NRA commission last week also unanimously approved an 18-point
directive for Tokyo Electric Power Co. to implement the decommissioning
of Fukushima Daiichi reactors 1 through 4 and to maintain the cold
shutdown of reactors 5 and 6. The list includes requirements for
monitoring plant parameters and preventing further hydrogen explosions
and countermeasures to maintain fuel cooling in the event of emergency
situations such as earthquakes, tsunamis and tornadoes.
- Japan’s Electric Power Development Co., or J-Power, announced last
week it had completed installing the upper steel lining of the
containment vessel for the 1,383-megawatt advanced boiling water reactor
(ABWR) it is building at the Ohma site in Aomori prefecture. J-Power
resumed the Ohma construction project Oct. 1, having suspended it after
last year’s Fukushima accident. Meanwhile, Chugoku Electric Power Co.
has refiled its application with local prefectural authorities to
continue site preparation work for two proposed ABWRs at Kaminoseki in
Yamaguchi prefecture. While Japan’s new nuclear policy bans new nuclear
plant construction, the government has allowed the construction of two
nuclear energy facilities (Ohma and Shimane) to resume. The Japan
Business Federation and the opposition Liberal Democratic Party have
voiced their opposition to the government’s nuclear phaseout plan.http://safetyfirst.nei.org/japan/japans-regulator-to-review-reactor-restart-requests-formulate-new-severe-accident-regulations/
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