comparemela.com

Page 9 - Suttsu News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Two Hokkaido villages at the heart of race to host nuclear waste

Feb 3, 2021 Two fishing villages in Hokkaido are vying to host the final storage facility for half a century of Japanese nuclear waste, splitting communities between those seeking investment to stop the towns from dying, and those haunted by the 2011 Fukushima disaster, who are determined to stop the project. In the middle is a government that bet heavily on nuclear energy to power its industrial ascent and now faces a massive and growing pile of radioactive waste with nowhere to dispose of it. Since it first began generating atomic energy in 1966, Japan has produced more than 19,000 tons of high-level nuclear waste that is sitting in temporary storage around the country. After searching fruitlessly for two decades for a permanent site, the approaches from Suttsu, population 2,885, and Kamoenai, population 810, may be signs of progress.

OPINION: Rural areas need common cause to take on central gov t

news OPINION: Rural areas need common cause to take on central gov t 共同通信社 © 共同通信社 The rural areas of Japan continue to be under the central government s thumb, divisions preventing them from coordinating and fostering solidarity. This October, the municipalities of Suttsu and Kamoenai in Hokkaido, the northernmost main island, applied for a preliminary government survey to assess their suitability to host a disposal site for high-level radioactive nuclear waste. The survey is already being conducted by the Nuclear Waste Management Organization of Japan, or NUMO, which is authorized by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. The original names of Suttsu and Kamoenai, which in the past prospered on herring fishing and coal mining, harken back to their beauty.

2020 December 20 « nuclear-news

“……….. the main sticking point to the promotion of thorium as a cleaner nuclear fuel is that it remains unproven on a commercial scale. Thorium MSRs (Molten Salt Reactors) have been in development since the 1960s by the United States, China, Russia, and France, yet nothing much ever came of them. Further, only about 50 of the world’s 440 reactors can currently be configured to run on thorium. …… Unfortunately, practical nuclear fusion remains a long-shot and could be decades away from becoming a commercial reality. We simply don’t have the luxury of time. Further, nuclear power in the U.S. faces an uncertain future. ……………

Nuclear waste plan spells doom for a Hokkaido fishing community

Hokkaido fishing villages face tough decision over nuclear disposal sites, Japan Times, HOKKAIDO SHIMBUN, Dec 18, 2020 A frosty wind was blowing in from the Sea of Japan at the Suttsu fishing port in Hokkaido in late November. There, catching anglerfish with a grim look on his face was 77-year-old fisherman Kyozo Kimura. “The haul of fish has been decreasing to the point where we can’t even make ends meet. It has been tough,” said Kimura. In 1977, Kimura, a native of the town of Matsumae, married into a family whose fishing business had been around for five generations since the Meiji Era (1868-1912). Longline fishing of trout prospered at the time, and he reminisced about the time when he got a new 29-ton ship, funded by his father-in-law, and was filled with hope that he could go out fishing anywhere with it.

Hokkaido fishing villages face stark choice over nuclear disposal sites

Hokkaido fishing villages face tough decision over nuclear disposal sites Sorry, but your browser needs Javascript to use this site. If you re not sure how to activate it, please refer to this site: https://www.enable-javascript.com/ Hokkaido Shimbun Dec 18, 2020 A frosty wind was blowing in from the Sea of Japan at the Suttsu fishing port in Hokkaido in late November. There, catching anglerfish with a grim look on his face was 77-year-old fisherman Kyozo Kimura. “The haul of fish has been decreasing to the point where we can’t even make ends meet. It has been tough,” said Kimura.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.