Japan; two developments
First, I'm seeing a hint that Sendai No. 1 may not start up on August 10 but rather on August 11. Not a big deal.
Second,
NRA has announced it will "prioritize" the review of TEPCO's
Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Units 6 and 7. As those of you who follow my
writings (all three or four of you!) will know, I've long maintained
that TEPCO's only real hope for economic recovery is to restart
Kashiwaki-Kariwa. Fukushima Prefecture will never allow any nuclear
plant to operate on its soil again, and so Fukushima Daini is
practically doomed, even though it survived the quake and tsunami.
TEPCO has not done anything at that site compared to what it continues
to do at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, which as you'll recall is on the opposite
coast.
The two units under review are TEPCO's only ABWR units, and are the most advanced in its fleet.
Some
other folks (not on this list, but in other circles I move in) have
questioned TEPCO's credibility with the public. My suggestion to them
was that TEPCO could, and perhaps after some sobering thought perhaps
SHOULD hire another nuclear utility to operate / manage
Kashiwazaki-Kariwa on its behalf, much the same way Exelon manages Fort
Calhoun for Omaha Public Power District. After some period of time and
enough transparency and public engagement, TEPCO (or whatever entity
exists by that time) could take back over operation itself. I have
begun to wonder whether or not such an arrangement might in fact be a
key to allowing TEPCO to restart the other, older units on that site in
the future -- essentially using public trust (or, rather, a lack of
identified distrust) in another operator to facilitate restarting all
seven units on the site and returning the company's cash inflow and
reducing electric power rates. It's worth a look.
Will Davis
Communications Director, N.S. Savannah Association, Inc.
Consultant / Author: American Nuclear Society
Contributing Author: Fuel Cycle Week Author: Atomic Power Review | |||
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