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Japan Power Technology

Japan Has Restarted Five Nuclear Power Reactors In 2018 (oilvoice.com) 193

With Shikoku Electric Power Company's 890 megawatt (MW) Ikata-3 reactor, Japan has restarted a total of five nuclear reactors in 2018. "Japan had suspended its nuclear fleet in 2013 for mandatory safety checks and upgrades following the 2011 Fukushima accident, and before 2018 only four reactors had been restarted," reports OilVoice. From the report: Following the Fukushima accident, as each Japanese nuclear reactor entered its scheduled maintenance and refueling outage, it was not returned to operation. Between September 2013 and August 2015, Japan's entire reactor fleet was suspended from operation, leaving the country with no nuclear generation. Sendai Units 1 and 2, in Japan's Kagoshima Prefecture, were the first reactors to be restarted in August and October 2015, respectively.

The restart of Japan's nuclear power plants requires the approval of both Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) and the central government, as well as consent from the governments of local prefectures. In July 2013, the NRA issued more stringent safety regulations to address issues dealing with tsunamis and seismic events, complete loss of station power, and emergency preparedness. As part of Japan's long-term energy policy, issued in April 2014, the central government called for the nuclear share of total electricity generation to reach 20%-22% by 2030, which would require 25 to 30 reactors to be in operation by then. In 2017, four operating nuclear reactors provided 3% of Japan's total electricity generation.

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Japan Has Restarted Five Nuclear Power Reactors In 2018

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  • What is the other 80% of electrical generation?

    It seems like if the "fleet" was shutdown and all the generation was lost for 3+ years, why did they need to start turning them on now?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by blindseer ( 891256 )

      What is the other 80% of electrical generation?

      Mostly coal.

      It seems like if the "fleet" was shutdown and all the generation was lost for 3+ years, why did they need to start turning them on now?

      Because importing all that coal to make up for the lost nuclear electrical generation capacity was costing a lot of money, producing a lot of pollution, and alternatives are far more expensive.

      I remember something of a joke I was once told... Do you know what a physician calls "alternative medicine" that works? Medicine.

      That's what I think of when people tell me we need more "alternative energy". If "alternative energy" worked then we'd just call it "energy".

      I'll believe wind and solar energy

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @06:07AM (#57725028) Homepage Journal

        Mostly coal.

        Nope. In 2015 Japan was:

        39% gas
        34% coal
        9% oil
        8.4% hydro
        ~4.3% other renewables
        0.9% nuclear

        Data from the IEA: https://www.iea.org/statistics... [iea.org]

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Only you are calling them "alternative energy", most people call it renewable energy.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Only you are calling them "alternative energy", most people call it renewable energy.

          Okay then, define "renewable energy" for me and then tell me how nuclear power does not fit that definition. Let me guess, wind and solar do not require mining fuel from the ground but instead rely on extracting the energy from natural processes that are never ending. Sound about right? Well, that's a nice definition but when wind and solar requires more than ten times the mining to get that energy that seems like a rather misleading definition. Take a look here at the material needed for wind and solar

          • by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @07:15AM (#57725152)

            Only you are calling them "alternative energy", most people call it renewable energy.

            Okay then, define "renewable energy" for me and then tell me how nuclear power does not fit that definition.

            Nuclear power isn't renewable because the fuel is spent, it cannot be renewed. The clue is in the name. It's not a fossil fuel either. Even if your claim that there will still be plenty left when we're done was true it is irrelevant to the question.

            • by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @07:39AM (#57725192)

              Nuclear power isn't renewable because the fuel is spent, it cannot be renewed.

              Arguably, breeder reactors do renew the fuel.

              And solar is just nuclear power with the reactor fueled at the beginning of the solar system (and yes, it will run out...eventually ;-p) and stored 150 gigameters away...

              • by SqueakyMouse ( 1003426 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @08:48AM (#57725426)
                That fusion reactor may be 150 gigameters away, but it's still a safety hazard! You can't even look at it directly without putting your eyes at risk, not to mention the cancer it causes.
                • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

                  by EvilSS ( 557649 )
                  "Solar power causes more cancer than all other forms of power generation combined!" Yep, gonna have fun with this one. Now excuse me, I'm off to troll Farcebook
              • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @08:53AM (#57725458) Journal

                > Arguably, breeder reactors do renew the fuel.

                They convert one resource ("fertile material") into fuel, but since that fertile material is itself not renewable the entire process isn't renewable.

                Solar is considered renewable because there is an effectively unlimited supply of sunlight. Even if the sun is only expected to last another few billion years, that is a pretty solid prediction and is so far beyond the horizon it can safely be considered unlimited.

                Wind and hydro are renewable because the air and water are not lost forever once they pass through the turbines.

                Biofuels are renewable because once you burn them, the carbon that was released into the air can be recaptured by more plants and turned back into biofuel. Logistical issues aside, this is a closed-loop carbon cycle and thus renewable.

                Nuclear is not renewable because once the fuel is spent, it's gone. There are some tricks to make new fuel, but there's no reasonable way to take all the waste and put it back into the system ad infinitum. Reprocessing spent fuel just removes contaminants and re-purifies the unused portion; it does not make new fuel from spent fuel.
                =Smidge=

                • by quenda ( 644621 )

                  > Arguably, breeder reactors do renew the fuel.

                  They convert one resource ("fertile material") into fuel, but since that fertile material is itself not renewable the entire process isn't renewable.

                  U235 is a limited resource, but there is enough u238 minable with current tech for thousands of years, and then there is thorium.
                  By the time that runs out, we should be close to getting fusion working.

                • This is incorrect. Uranium is approximately as renewable as solar.

                  The sun will eventually go out, after consuming most of its fuel. You could say we will be dead by then, but we actually have enough uranium in the Earth to last the same amount of time. So they both get "used up" at about the same time.

                  Also, once the sun is gone a new star will likely eventually be formed. So the sun is actually "renewable". But in a similar way, the old sun's final moments will likely produce more uranium than was ever

                  • > but we actually have enough uranium in the Earth to last the same amount of time.

                    Yeah not even close. Some cursory research and math suggests anywhere from ~200 to ~170,000 years of fuel depending on how efficiently we use it, whether or not we can successfully develop thorium fuel cycles (and how efficiently we can use *that*), and assuming NO GROWTH IN POWER USAGE over 2016 levels.

                    Even the rosiest of outlooks are a far cry from ~4 billion years.
                    =Smidge=

          • by mangastudent ( 718064 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @07:52AM (#57725244)

            All the steel, copper, aluminum, and so on needed for the wires and structures for that wind and solar has to come from somewhere.

            Well, after a wind tower reaches its end of life in 20, maybe 25 years, you can recycle the metals pretty easily. The plastics used to insulate wires, etc. not so much. Doubt much of a solar panel can be recycled, but I don't have any figures off the top of my head on their lifecycle, might not be as ultra short as wind towers, which are subject to lots of stress, with many parts needing to be as light as possible, forcing engineers into tough yield (of power) and longevity tradeoffs, and they're badly exposed to the elements. Solar cells, you ought to be able to seal them up pretty well, but I have no idea how much they're subject to degradation over time.

            • Solar cells, you ought to be able to seal them up pretty well, but I have no idea how much they're subject to degradation over time.

              Thin-film solar cells can last around twenty years, but will have substantial loss by that time. PC cells can last much longer [cleantechnica.com]. This kind of information is readily available via a simple google search, which is how I found it, though I already knew. The truth is that if we had started building solar plants en masse in the 1970s, most of those panels could still be producing over 70% output today. Of course, they probably wouldn't be, because they probably would have been replaced, and the used panels sold a

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Okay then, define "renewable energy" for me and then tell me how nuclear power does not fit that definition.

            Renewable sources use naturally self-renewing resources, with the caveat that the renewal must be over a relatively short term. Another general requirement is that the use of the fuel causes little pollution or environmental damage.

            It's a myth that wind and solar require massive amounts of mining. The blog you cite is unconvincing and the sources it cites don't support its conclusion. Do you have something peer reviewed that shows that all the experts in this field calling for more wind and solar power and

          • by Dr. Evil ( 3501 )

            The material used in renewable generation can be recycled.

            Nuclear waste issues are complex and not fully resolved. They're not purely technical problems either.

            Nuclear safety issues are also complex and not fully resolved. Sure a blue-sky fresh power plant built with the best technologies is a dandy thing, but that's not what we're talking about.

            I say this, and I'm pro-nuclear.

            • by quenda ( 644621 )

              Carbon waste sequestration from fossil fuel is not remotely solved.
              Storage of wind and solar power for 24/7 supply is complex and not fully solved.

              Hydro is clean - aside from the pristine valley ecosystems that were wiped out. And Hydro dam failures make Chernobyl look like traffic accident.
              If there was a perfect solution, we would be using it.

              • by Dr. Evil ( 3501 )

                You sound like you're stuck in a false dichotomy.

                Meh. Experts are using a mix of solutions and researching renewables. All good from my standpoint. Fossil fuel subsidies and free carbon waste should end though. Carbon taxes etc, would put nuclear on stronger footing.

      • I'll believe wind and solar energy can compete with nuclear power when people no longer refer to them as "alternative energy".

        Um, nobody calls wind, solar or hydro "alternative energy".

        (Well, almost nobody. Apparently you do...)

        "Alternative energy" is all those crackpots on youtube who claim to invent perpetual motion machines.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by doom ( 14564 )
          True, they tend to call it "renewables", because if they just pushed for "clean" energy, that would include nuclear, and since we all know nuclear power is the ultimate evil anything that might encourage it's use is Bad and Wrong... Green activists that would rather see increases in Greenhouse Gas Emissions are one of the psychological puzzles of the modern world...
          • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

            A psychological puzzle of the modern world are people who think nuclear is a solution to anything although it has repeatedly shown to be an economical failure.

      • I'll believe wind and solar energy can compete with nuclear power when people no longer refer to them as "alternative energy".

        Humans were using wind power to do work long before they were using coal to do anything other than produce heat. The idea that wind power is alternative energy is a trick which was pulled upon you by the fossil fuel industry, and here you are feeling all smug about your complicity. How useful of you.

      • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

        I guess the 216 TWh of electricity generated by renewables produced in Germany in 2017 (33% of all electricity generated) is a placebo effect then. Or somebody here lives in its own alternative reality where renewables don't work.

        • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

          How much do you pay for that again? 3 times as much as other countries?

          Please come back when it's actually competitive.

          • Mein Gott! I knew it was bad, but per these two sources, one [statista.com] and two [cleanenergywire.org], for households it's 33 US cents per kWh, 33.29 from the last and Bing's currency conversion calculator. Three times the general US price indeed, and I've heard its really pinching people in the winter. I guess it was more than low natural gas prices that prompted BASF to do their lastest rounds of expansion in the US, especially Texas, which has its own grid since it's big enough to have a stable one and that avoids a lot of Federal

          • When the alternative is paying the Ruskys for gas (and being extorted), Germans are happy to pay more.

            • When the alternative is paying the Ruskys for gas (and being extorted), Germans are happy to pay more.

              Or, you know, they could have kept their nuclear reactors running, Germans have a safety culture that's up to the job, unlike the Japanese. Per Wikipedia, 8 permanently closed just coincidentally before state elections representing 43% of their nuclear electrical power, the rest by 2022, although I seem to recall some recent waffling about that.

              Or, you know, continue and/or resume burning a lot of coal, as

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Energy imports. With the natural gas, crude oil. Coal.
  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @06:52AM (#57725092) Journal

    Nuclear power is one of the cleanest energy sources, as well as one of the safest. The fact that a modern industrialized nation like Japan realizes this, should be encouraging for those who care about the planet's climate and health.

    • Hopefully Germany will take note. They abandoned nuclear after the Fukushima disaster and effectively abandoned their Energiewende.
      • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
        Yea but didn't they just start buying more power from France and their nuclear power plants?
        • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

          No. Official numbers are here: https://www.ag-energiebilanzen... [ag-energiebilanzen.de]
          Germany has net exports of 55 TWh of electricity in 2017. It produced 216 TWh of electricity from renewables which is 33% of total production. Energiewende works fine. It is France which once in a while has to import from Germany because nuclear is not too reliable (e.g. in sommer when it gets to hot) or because they have to shut down a large part of the fleet for maintance.

  • This is good, because having the planets closed caused Japan to have their highest greenhouse gas emissions on record. And Japan is the world's 5th largest in emissions.
  • I remember seeing an article last year about Solar paint. Meaning, you paint the building with this specific paint and it can be used generate clean energy. This was developed in the UK, which is not where I would expect to spend my days sunning on the beach.
    A team of researchers from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) has developed a paint that can be used to generate clean energy. The paint combines the titanium oxide already used in many wall paints with a new compound: synthetic molyb
  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @11:38AM (#57726346)

    Seems like every post that makes a good point has a 1 score. Somebody doesn't like nuclear power here but they'd better get used to the idea.

  • the NRA issued more stringent safety regulations to address issues dealing with tsunamis and seismic events, complete loss of station power, and emergency preparedness.

    The new regulations are to wear hearing protection while shooting at tsunamis.

    • Works in certain fiction universes. [fanfiction.net]

      (In the Worm ("parahumans") web novel, one of the "Engbringers" (yeah, the name tells you most of what you need to know) main power is hydrokinesis on a massive scale, tsunamis are a regular part of his repertoire. But if you've got clean nukes....)

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