Monday, February 3, 2025, 6:42 AM
BREAKING NEWS
**ISRAEL AND HAMAS AGREE GAZA CEASEFIRE DEAL TO HALT WAR, QATAR SAYS **Israel and Hamas have agreed a ceasefire starting on Sunday to halt the devastating 15-month war in Gaza, Qatar’s Prime Minister says. **Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani made the announcement, saying that the deal will lead to the release of Israeli captives and surging humanitarian aid to Gaza. ****During phase one of the ceasefire deal Palestinians can return home: Biden **Humanitarian assistance in the Gaza Strip will increase : Biden **Israel and Hamas will negotiate the necessary arrangements in phase two : Biden **If negotiations take longer than six weeks, the ceasefire will continue: Biden **Reconstruction plan for Gaza in phase three: Joe Biden **Biden says now in phase three, final remains of hostages will return to their families and a reconstruction plan for Gaza will begin. **He says the road to this deal "has not been easy", and he calls it one of the toughest negotiations he has experienced. **Iran is weaker than it has been in decades, he adds, and says Hezbollah - the Lebanese armed group backed by Iran in Lebanon - is "badly degraded".
Monday, February 3, 2025, 6:42 AM
Home » World’s biggest nuclear plant in Japan to resume path towards restart

World’s biggest nuclear plant in Japan to resume path towards restart

Tepco has been eager to bring the world's largest atomic power plant back online to slash operating costs

by NWMNewsDesk
0 comment

Japan’s nuclear power regulator on Wednesday lifted an operational ban it imposed on Tokyo Electric Power’s (9501.T) massive Kashiwazaki-Kariwa power plant two years ago, clearing the path for it to resume a process towards a restart.

Tepco has been eager to bring the world’s largest atomic power plant back online to slash operating costs, but a resumption still needs local consent in Niigata prefecture, on the Sea of Japan coast.

With capacity of 8,212 megawatts (MW), the plant has been offline since around 2011, when the Fukushima disaster prompted the eventual shutdown of all nuclear power plants in Japan at the time.

In 2021, the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) barred Tepco from operating Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, its only operable atomic power station, due to safety breaches including the failure to protect nuclear materials and missteps that led to an unauthorised staff member accessing sensitive areas of the plant.

banner

Citing improvements in the safety management system, the NRA on Wednesday lifted a corrective action order that had prevented Tepco from transporting new uranium fuel to the plant or loading fuel rods into its reactors – effectively blocking a resumption.

Shares in Tepco had risen sharply after the NRA indicated early this month that it would consider lifting the operational ban after conducting an on-site inspection and meeting with the company’s president.

You may also like

Blogs

Latest Articles

© 2024 News World Media. All Rights Reserved.