A radioactive
water leak has halted plans to re-start a reactor at a nuclear power
plant in western Japan.
This would have been the fourth to come
online after a nationwide shutdown, its operator recently said.
Kansai Electric Power said some 34
litres (8.8 gallons) of cooling water containing radioactive
substances leaked out from the reactor at its Takahama plant 380
kilometres (236 miles) west of Tokyo.
"Resumption procedures related to
the incident have been suspended as we are still investigating the
cause," a company spokesman said, adding that there was no
impact on the environment outside the plant.
The government and utility firms have
been pushing to get reactors back in operation nearly five years
after a huge earthquake and tsunami caused a disastrous meltdown at
the Fukushima nuclear power plant.
The accident
forced all of Japan's dozens of reactors offline for about two years
in the face of public worries over the safety of nuclear technology
and fears about radiation exposure.
Last month,
another reactor at Kansai Electric Power's Takahama plant was
switched on, but the accident stalls plans to bring the next one
online which have already met with stiff opposition from local
residents.
The Fukui District Court in December
overturned an injunction preventing a re-start of the two reactors
which had been won by residents, who argued it was not proven to be
safe despite a green light from the national Nuclear Regulation
Authority.
Two reactors in the southern prefecture
of Kagoshima, operated by Kyushu Electric Power, restarted in August
and October 2015, ending the two-year hiatus in nuclear power
generation.
But many Japanese remain wary and
thousands of former residents have refused to return to areas hit by
the Fukushima meltdown over fears of radiation exposure.
The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster
(福島第一原子力発電所事故
was an energy accident at the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant,
initiated primarily by the tsunami of the Tōhoku earthquake on 11
March 2011.
The damage caused by the tsunami produced equipment
failures, and without this equipment a loss-of-coolant accident
followed with three nuclear meltdowns and releases of radioactive
materials beginning on 12 March.
It is the largest nuclear disaster
since the Chernobyl disaster of 1986 and the second disaster (after
Chernobyl) to be given the Level 7 event classification of the
International Nuclear Event Scale.
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