Japan Nuclear Restarts Could be Two Weeks Away

Energy Investing

World Nuclear News reported that Kyushu Electric Power Company (TYO:9508) is planning to apply for the final ‘applied safety inspection’ of its Sendai 1 reactor on August 3. The inspection is expected to take one week, meaning August 10 would be the potential start-up date.

World Nuclear News reported that Kyushu Electric Power Company (TYO:9508) is planning to apply for the final ‘applied safety inspection’ of its Sendai 1 reactor on August 3. The inspection is expected to take one week, meaning August 10 would be the potential start-up date.
As quoted in the market news:

The Sendai 1 nuclear power reactor is being readied for restart with fuel already loaded, and tests on main systems underway. Sendai 1 should become the first Japanese reactor to generate power in almost two years. The company’s technical and operational plans and procedures have been approved by the Nuclear Regualtory Authority (NRA), which then checked that the technical upgrades had been implemented correctly.
Now Kyushu is the process of actually starting the 890 MWe pressurized water reactor and NRA is overseeing functional and safety checks of main systems including fuel assembly configuration, the leak-tightness of containment and the coolant loop, and the instrumentation and control systems. The utility is today conducting an emergency response drill to check the procedures and the readiness of staff to cope with events at the plant that could lead to severe accident conditions.
Japan’s entire nuclear safety framework was reconsidered after a tsunami caused a major nuclear accident at Fukushima Daiichi in 2011. The new Nuclear Regulatory Authority was created, with more independence from both government and industry than its predecessor, and it wrote a new set of safety requirements for nuclear power plants. Meeting those requirements required extensive engineering work by power companies, as well as changes to their corporate and operational cultures. All this has been subject to lengthy public approval processes, which are now nearing completion for Sendai 1.

Click here to read the full World Nuclear News report.

The Conversation (0)
×