15 years after the Fukushima disaster, Japan is preparing for nuclear energy


When Japan restarted one of the seven reactors at the world’s largest nuclear plant in January, many residents of the nearby village of Kariwa (population about 4,200) felt uneasy. Although not the mayor.

Shinada Hiroo expresses unwavering confidence in the people running the nuclear facility, reflecting a changing attitude toward nuclear power in Japan.

Fifteen years ago on Wednesday, a powerful earthquake and subsequent tsunami triggered the nuclear emergency in Fukushima. Japan’s government responded by shutting down all 54 of the country’s nuclear reactors. And in 2012, it even decided to phase out nuclear power generation. But today, with Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae at the helm, Japan is slowly putting nuclear power at the center of its national energy policy.

Why do we write this?

Japan shut down all of its nuclear reactors after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011. Now, the government – ​​and the public – have changed course. The country is returning to nuclear energy, but there is still some skepticism.

Some remain skeptical. But the restart of reactor No. 6 at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant is a key moment in Japan’s pivot to nuclear power once again.

“They are colleagues like village farmers and factory workers,” Mr. Shinada says emphatically, referring to the staff and executives at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant. The sprawling plant, operated by Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), is located in Kariwa and the city of Kashiwazaki, about 140 miles northwest of Tokyo.

Mr. Shinada, a former amateur racing driver, is one of the few local leaders who has maintained a long-term relationship with Tepco. The company lost considerable trust among the Japanese public after the meltdown of Tepco’s Fukushima nuclear facility in March 2011.

Mayor Shinada Hiroo of Kirawa, Japan, says it is important to build a relationship of trust with the authorities managing the nuclear power plant located near his village, March 3, 2026.

“Although some Tokyo Electric executives used to be called ’emperors,’ the company has paid more attention to local issues,” Shinada says.

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