
Tomari plant's No.3 reactor in northern Japan passes screening for restart
The Tomari plant is located in Hokkaido Prefecture and operated by Hokkaido Electric Power Company.
Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority in April compiled a draft screening report on the plant's No.3 reactor under the new regulations drawn up after the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident. It then sought public opinions.
At an NRA meeting on Wednesday, officials reported they received 143 opinions. One of them says a survey on active faults in the seabed may have been insufficient.
The NRA concluded that safety measures by Hokkaido Electric are all satisfactory, and it unanimously approved the screening report.
The Tomari No.3 unit is the 18th reactor that has passed the screening.
It took a record 12 years for the reactor to clear the review since the utility applied for it. That is partly because of a survey on active faults under the plant's site.
Hokkaido Electric will proceed with safety measures that meet the new regulations, including construction of seawalls. The company says it wants to restart the reactor as early as possible in 2027.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Japan Times
3 hours ago
- Japan Times
Cram school lecturers may teach at public schools in Japan
The education ministry is considering launching a model project in fiscal 2026 to dispatch cram school lecturers and others with teaching qualifications to public schools as temporary teachers, in an effort to address the issue of teachers' excessive workload, ministry sources have said. The ministry plans to include related expenses in its budget request for the fiscal year starting next April. The project will send cram school lecturers and retired teachers, as well as corporate workers who hold teaching licenses but do not work in education, to public schools where vacancies have arisen due to teachers taking maternity, child care or sick leave. The plan is to establish a system in which universities with teacher training courses register teaching personnel in advance for dispatch to prefectures and major cities. The competition ratio for public school teacher exams has declined since peaking at 13.3 times in fiscal 2000, reaching a record low of 3.2 times in fiscal 2024. There are fewer cases of prospective teachers who failed the recruitment exam working as nonregular temporary teachers while preparing for the next exam, making it difficult for public schools to secure temporary teachers. With more teachers taking maternity and child care leave, it is said that other teachers are facing the problem of long working hours to cover for their absence, as schools are sometimes unable to hire replacement teachers. The ministry hopes to help public schools secure sufficient human resources and reduce the burden on teachers. In launching the model project, the ministry plans to use as a reference the British supply teacher system, in which local governments and companies dispatch registered personnel to schools as substitute teachers. By identifying issues through the model project, the ministry aims to create a system that enables public schools to quickly fill sudden teacher vacancies.


NHK
5 hours ago
- NHK
Japan to propose new economic zone at TICAD meeting
NHK has learned that the Japanese government is planning to propose a new economic zone spanning India to Africa when it hosts a conference on African development this month. The Tokyo International Conference on African Development, or TICAD, will take place in Yokohama City for three days from August 20. The Japan-led meeting is held every three years. The Japanese government intends to advocate the initiative as it thinks the region stretching from India through the Middle East to the African continent has the potential to become the center of economic growth. It hopes to build a free and fair economic zone and strengthen inter-regional connectivity based on a free and open Indo-Pacific that it has been promoting. The government also aims to boost ties with the Global South, including African countries, and provide support to Japanese businesses in their efforts to expand trade and investment in the proposed zone. A Foreign Ministry source noted that some Japanese companies are making inroads into Africa from bases in India and the Middle East. The source said the government plans to pursue an extensive approach by strategically combining policy tools.


Japan Times
9 hours ago
- Japan Times
FSA eager to back regional bank realignment
Financial Services Agency Commissioner Yutaka Ito has expressed eagerness to support the realignment of regional banks to enhance financial services in Japan. "We will do our best to support consolidations and mergers if they contribute to the provision of high-quality regional financial services," Ito said in a recent interview. Ito, who took office in July, stressed that cooperation with nonfinancial businesses is also crucial for the management of regional lenders. "In order to make the management foundation sustainable, options such as reorganization, standardization of operations and collaboration with nonfinancial businesses should be considered," he said. Although financial institutions' profits are improving thanks to interest rate hikes by the Bank of Japan, the environment surrounding such institutions "will change rapidly from now on," Ito said, claiming that they "need to make management decisions now." The FSA plans to draw up a program to strengthen regional financial capabilities by the end of this year, which will include the extension and expansion of the public fund injection system. Ito showed eagerness to establish a backup system to maintain financial functions in the event of natural disasters. He also expressed his intention to improve the subsidy system that can be used on the occasions of mergers and business integrations. Meanwhile, malicious fraudulent loans have been discovered at regional credit cooperative Iwaki Shinkumi Bank in Fukushima Prefecture where public funds were injected after the March 2011 major earthquake and tsunami. "We need to ensure appropriate business operations," Ito said. "At the minimum, we have to conduct business management and prevent fraudulent practices at institutions in which we have equity participation." In recent years, there have been a series of scandals in the financial industry, such as illicit automobile insurance claims and safe deposit box thefts. "If we take superficial measures, problems will arise again," Ito said, calling for reforms after finding out the root causes.