Two years after Fukushima, Japan's nuclear lobby bounces back
Published: Friday, Mar 8, 2013, 16:28 IST 
Place: TOKYO     |     Agency: Reuters 

The crowds of anti-nuclear protesters have dwindled since Japan's 
"Summer of Discontent" last year, and a new government is keen to revive the 
country's atomic energy industry, but Morishi Izumita says he is 
not about to throw in the towel.
"We can't give up. I'm here every week," said 64-year-old Izumita, 
one of hundreds gathered outside the prime minister's office one Friday 
nearly two years after a huge earthquake and tsunami triggered the 
world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986 at Japan's 
Fukushima Daiichi plant. "We need to be out here protesting. Not giving 
up is the important thing," he added, as other activists banged on drums and 
chanted "Stop nuclear power, protect our children".

As Japan 
approaches the second anniversary of the Fukushima disaster on March 11, its 
anti-nuclear movement appears to be struggling and disgraced 
pro-nuclear forces are rallying. Although a recent survey showed some 
70% of Japanese want to phase out nuclear power eventually, an equal 
number back their new, pro-nuclear prime minister, Shinzo Abe, who wants to 
restart off-line reactors if they meet new safety standards as he 
pushes policies aimed at reviving a long-stagnant economy.
The 
anti-nuclear movement will have a chance to show its strength this 
weekend as Japan commemorates the disaster. The Metropolitan Coalition 
Against Nukes, which organised many of last year's mass protests, has 
called for a mass rally to protest outside parliament on Sunday, the eve of the 
anniversary.

The March 11, 2011 quake and tsunami killed 
nearly 19,000 people and smashed Tokyo Electric Power Co's Fukushima 
plant, triggering meltdowns, spewing radiation and forcing some 160,000 
people to flee their homes, many never to return.
The disaster 
also destroyed a carefully cultivated myth that nuclear power was cheap 
and safe - and mobilised Japan's often apathetic voters in huge 
anti-nuclear demonstrations during a 2012 summer of discontent. Half a 
year later, the pro-nuclear Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) swept back to power 
- not because voters had changed their minds about energy policy, but because 
neither the then-ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) nor smaller opposition 
parties provided a credible standard-bearer for 
anti-nuclear sentiment.

Now, the issue seems to have been swept 
aside amid hopes Abe can revive the economy and restore dented national 
pride. "Two years have passed, the economic situation is getting better 
... and it may be true people are forgetting about energy issues," said 
Hiroshi Takahashi at the Fujitsu Research Institute, a member of the 
panel that drafted the DPJ government's plan to exit atomic energy by 
the 2030s.

Takahashi, along with most other experts who questioned whether Japan should 
stick with atomic energy, has been bumped from the panel as Abe's government 
begins its policy rethink. Abe's government 
plans to review from scratch his DPJ predecessor's plan to exit nuclear 
power while boosting renewable sources of energy such as solar and wind 
power, and wants to restart off-line reactors that are certified safe 
under standards now being drafted by a new Nuclear Regulatory Agency.

"The 'nuclear village' is back in the driver's seat," said Jeffrey Kingston, 
director of Asian studies at Temple University's Japan campus. The term 
'nuclear village' refers to the powerful nexus of politicians, 
bureaucrats and utilities that for decades promoted atomic power in 
Japan. "All the noises from the government are in favour of restarts ... They 
own the corridors of power."

All but two of Japan's 50 
reactors remain switched off after the disaster and no more are expected to be 
restarted until after July, when the new regulator is due to 
finalise tougher safety requirements more in line with international 
norms. That would also be after an upper house election that Abe's 
ruling bloc needs to win to cement its grip on power.
The 
58-year-old Abe, who has focused on reviving the stagnant economy since 
taking office in December, is enjoying sky-high popularity ratings of 
around 70%.

Surveys suggest, though, that anti-nuclear sentiment 
may be simmering beneath the surface. Fifty-nine percent in an Asahi 
newspaper poll last month wanted Japan to abandon atomic energy by the 
2030s and another 12 percent by a later date.
Only 18% said Japan 
should stick with nuclear energy indefinitely. Nuclear energy supplied 
nearly 30 percent of Japan's electricity needs before Fukushima and 
proponents argue it is vital to provide a stable electricity supply, 
keep down utility rates and prevent Japanese manufacturers from fleeing 
overseas in ever greater numbers, taking jobs with them.

"You'd 
think that people would have acquiesced to the so-called facts, but that 
doesn't appear to be the case," said Andrew DeWit, a professor at 
Rikkyo University in Tokyo who writes about energy policy. "People are 
not going out into the streets but there is a lot of outrage. It's like a dry 
forest waiting for a spark and restarts will be the real test."

http://www.dnaindia.com/world/report_two-years-after-fukushima-japan-s-nuclear-lobby-bounces-back_1808845


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