Japan eyes nuclear for a fifth of electricity supply

Japan eyes nuclear for a fifth of electricity supply

TOKYO - Agence France-Presse
Japan eyes nuclear for a fifth of electricity supply

AP Photo

A fifth of Japan's electricity supply should come from nuclear power generation, the country's industry ministry said April 28, despite widespread opposition in the aftermath of the Fukushima disaster.

With none of the nation's viable nuclear reactors in operation, the target indicates an intention to bring most, if not all of them, back online.
 
Japan's intended energy mix -- what proportion of power comes from which sources -- has been a subject of hot debate for months, not least because without it, Tokyo has been unable to make international commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
 
In its proposal, which will be debated by the government for final policy formulation by the end of next month, the industry ministry said by 2030, about 20-22 percent of the country's electricity should come from nuclear power.
 
Supply from renewables such as solar and wind power should be doubled to 22-24 percent.
 
The industry ministry favours nuclear power as a way to cut emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, despite a groundswell of public opposition since the nuclear crisis in Fukushima.
 
Reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant went into meltdown in March 2011 after a tsunami swamped their cooling systems -- setting off the worst atomic disaster since Chernobyl in 1986. Japan's entire stable of nuclear power stations was gradually switched off following the disaster, while tens of thousands of people were evacuated due to concerns about radiation exposure.
 
Many Fukushima area residents are still unable to return to their homes and scientists have warned that some areas around the plant may remain uninhabitable for decades or more.
 
Pro-nuclear premier Shinzo Abe and the country's business sector have however since pushed to restart plants that once supplied more than one quarter of Japan's electricity, as a plunging yen had sent energy import bills through the roof.
 
Abe's government has pledged to lower the country's dependence on nuclear power and promote so-called "green energy", but insists that heavy reliance on renewables is unrealistic because of cost and stability issues.
 
Japan's pro-nuclear lobby said last week that 2015 would be the year reactors are restarted, despite public wariness.
 
Of the 48 surviving reactors, four reactors were decommissioned on April 27 after failing to meet new, stricter safety standards, and another will be permanently taken out of operation on April 30, Jiji Press reported.
 
But the 20-22 percent supply figure indicates that most, if not all, of the remaining 43 reactors will have to be restarted, though most have yet to receive the green light from regulators.     The ministry's plan came a day after its latest estimate said that nuclear power generation is the cheapest energy source, beating fossil fuels and renewables.
 
The latest estimate says nuclear power would cost 10.1 yen (about 8.5 US cents) per kilowatt-hour in 2030, up from 8.9 yen in the 2011 estimate.     It took into account the costs of boosting safety at plants following the 2011 disaster -- and also lowered risk of accidents as a result of tougher safety measures.
 
The figure is cheaper than the 12.9 yen for coal-fired power generation, 16.4 yen for solar, and up to 21.9 yen for wind, said the ministry.