DAN ROBITZSKI
[…]
After the devastating storm that brought down the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, Japan imposed a slew of new safety standards, Agence France-Presse reports. A reactor at the Onagawa nuclear plant, which was damaged by the same tsunami but fared better than Fukushima, has been granted full approval and is expected to be back online by 2023.
[…]
So far, 15 other reactors have also met Japan’s new safety standards. But the Onagawa plant is the first to cross the final regulatory threshold, AFP reports. It also has coveted support from the local government, which sees rebooting nuclear energy as a crucial part of fighting climate change.
[…]
Workaround
But much of the Japanese public is still —understandably — skeptical of nuclear energy after the 2011 tsunami, AFP reports.
As a result, other parts of Japan plan to simply do away with nuclear energy in addition to fossil fuels. For instance, the Fukushima prefecture, home of the still-crumbling nuclear power plant of the same name, announced earlier this year that it plans to transition entirely to renewable energy sources within 20 years.
Read more at JAPAN IS BRINGING ONE OF ITS TSUNAMI-DAMAGED NUCLEAR REACTORS BACK ONLINE