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Fukushima residents rip nuke power
Topic Started: 2 Aug 2012, 02:58 AM (33 Views)
skibboy
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Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2012

Government officials get earful in public hearing held on the frontline of reactor catastrophe
Fukushima residents rip nuke power

By NATSUKO FUKUE
Staff writer

FUKUSHIMA — Residents of Fukushima Prefecture, speaking Wednesday at a government-sponsored public hearing on national energy policy, called for an end to dependence on nuclear energy by 2030.

The event in the prefecture that hosts the crippled Fukushima No. 1 power plant was the latest in a series of nationwide hearings by the central government to solicit views on its proposals for the target ratio of nuclear energy by 2030.

Unlike earlier gatherings, the government limited attendance to Fukushima residents and boosted the number of speakers from 12 to 30.

More than 20 of the 30 people allowed to express their opinion, chosen from about 150 people who signed up for a chance to speak, said Japan should abandon nuclear power as soon as possible.

"The crisis has not ended yet. It's completely wrong to restart nuclear reactors under such circumstances," said a man who gave his name only as Endo.

His comments drew loud applause.

"Those who can't take responsibility (for the crisis) shouldn't be so quick to talk about restarting reactors," he said.

A retired man from Aizuwakamatsu agreed.

He said Japan should immediately scrap all nuclear reactors. "I'm saying this partly because I regret I wasn't thinking seriously about nuclear energy before the March 11 disaster," he said, adding the government should make efforts to shift to green energy.

"Some say that the economy will stagnate without nuclear power, but we can't choose something that puts our lives at risk," he said.

Amid criticism over how participants were chosen to speak in the previous hearings, the government said this time it chose them at random regardless of which of three options they prefer for midterm energy policy: reducing nuclear power dependence to zero percent, 15 percent, or 20 to 25 percent by 2030.

Environment Minister Goshi Hosono, who attended the meeting, said the government regards the hearing in Fukushima as the most important, which is why the number of speakers was more than doubled.

But participants were skeptical about whether the central government will take their opinions into consideration when finalizing the energy policy.

"I don't want them to use (the hearing) as an excuse that they listened to citizens' opinions" said Hanazawa, a mother of two daughters in the city of Fukushima, who also stressed that the government should give up on nuclear power as soon as possible.

"The government should take responsibility for what happened" in Fukushima, she said. "There are monitoring posts everywhere in town. The weather forecast also talks about the level of radiation. This is not a normal way of life."

The government, which initially planned to finalize the energy policy by the end of August after holding hearings in 11 cities, has reportedly postponed a decision until September or even later.

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skibboy
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Fukushima residents say resounding "no" to nuclear ene

By Kiyoshi Takenaka
FUKUSHIMA, Japan | Wed Aug 1, 2012 8:21am EDT

(Reuters) - Get out of nuclear power and do it fast, angry Fukushima residents told Japanese government officials on Wednesday at a public hearing on energy policy held in an area ravaged by a nuclear disaster that has whipped up opposition to atomic power.

The Fukushima hearing, the ninth out of 11 planned nationwide, sought to gather views on nuclear power's role in the nation's energy mix as the government struggles to cover a power shortfall by that could threaten economic growth.

Meltdowns at Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s Fukushima nuclear plant after an earthquake and tsunami on March 11 last year caused radiation to spew over large areas of Fukushima, forcing more than 160,0000 people to flee.

In the following months, all of Japan's nuclear plants were shut for safety checks. Two reactors resumed operations last month.

"I want all the reactors in Japan shut immediately and scrapped," a grey-haired woman, who introduced herself as a farmer living 65 km (40 miles) from the Fukushima plant, said at the public hearing in the prefecture capital.

"Many people are now aware that the government's talking of 'no immediate risk to health' is tantamount to 'long-term health risk'," she said to the applause of about 200 residents packed in a small concert hall.

Goshi Hosono, minister in charge of the response to the nuclear crisis, was heckled as he apologized for the suffering of people in Fukushima.

"I will never forget what I heard today, and I'm determined to do everything I can," he said.

Fukushima prosecutors on Wednesday launched an investigation after more than 1,000 residents filed criminal complaints against 15 former and present Tokyo Electric Power officials, including former company president Masataka Shimizu, and 18 government officials, including Nuclear Safety Commission head Haruki Madarame, a lawyer for the group, Hiroyuki Kawai, told Reuters.

Kawai said Tokyo prosecutors had launched a separate investigation.

A panel of experts appointed by parliament concluded last month that the disaster could have been prevented and that failure to take precautions was the result of "collusion" among the utility, regulators and the government.

"After reading the report by the parliament-appointed panel, prosecutors could not stand idly by," Kawai said.

THREE OPTIONS

Japan met about a third of its energy needs with nuclear power before the disaster and had plans to boost that share to more than half, in part, to combat global warming.

Now, three options that the government has put on the table are to phase out nuclear power completely as soon as possible, aim for a 15 percent share of the power supply by 2030, or a 20-25 percent share by the same date.

Residents of Fukushima, 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo, overwhelmingly backed the zero option, with all but one of the 30 who were picked in a draw to speak backing a swift exit.

The Asahi newspaper reported this week that elsewhere 70 percent of those taking part in the hearings opted for the nuclear-free scenario.

It is not clear how the hearings will affect the final energy plan that could come as soon as this month.

But commentators said it would be hard for the government to ignore the findings as 17 months after the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl, many still live in fear and thousands hired to dismantle the Fukushima plant face decades of grueling and dangerous work.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's decision to restart two reactors in Japan's western manufacturing hub to avoid blackouts galvanized the anti-nuclear movement.

More than 100,000 people attended an anti-nuclear rally last month and protests staged weekly outside of Noda's residence have grown, with ordinary workers and mothers with children joining the crowds.

"I'm scared. I'm really scared," said a middle-aged woman, addressing the hearing.

"I'd like the government to think about why people have gathered in front of the prime minister's residence every Friday since April. That's not fashion. That's not a temporary fever. That's a heartfelt scream from the public."

(Additional reporting by Linda Sieg in Tokyo; Writing by Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Ed Lane)

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