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Abandon (ou non) du nucléaire

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Energies renouvelables, l’avenir du Japon ? Fukushima gets wind farm two years after nuclear disaster - video | Environment. Japon : Fukushima parie sur l‘éolien. Ce sera le plus grand champ éolien offshore au monde. Il se trouvera à Fukushima. Le Japon a lancé le chantier ce vendredi 12 juillet avec l’ancrage des chaînes géantes qui relieront les 143 éoliennes par 200 mètres de fond. D’ici 2020, elles produiront 1 gigawatt d‘électricité, deux fois plus que le plus grand champ actuel. Deux ans après la catastrophe nucléaire, le gouvernement n’a pas choisi le site par hasard. “Tout d’abord, nous voulons en faire un symbole du rétablissement de Fukushima. La centrale atomique de Fukushima Daiichi porte encore les traces du séisme et du tsunami de mars 2011. Le Japon va-t-il sortir du nucléaire? Le Japon veut faire ses adieux au nucléaire.

Editorial: Time to say goodbye to nuclear power. Editorial: Gov't must listen to communities striving to recover from nuke disaster. Tohoku Electric to abandon planned nuclear plant in Fukushima! Kyodo TOKYO, JAPAN, 28 SEPTEMBER – Kasumigaseki – The woman’s active group “KNOW NEW KISS” (Japanese phonetically : No Nukes) at the anti-nuclear demonstration in front of the National Diet Building (Kokkai Gijidou) – Following shyly the example of the Femen’s Ukrainian activist, they use the charm of their naked shoulder an belly to protest about the resumption of the nuclear power after the Fukushima’s crisis. – September 2012Copyright:Sébastien Lebègue SENDAI – Tohoku Electric Power Co. is planning to withdraw its plan to build a new nuclear plant in Fukushima Prefecture, local government sources said Thursday, in the first such move since the March 2011 nuclear disaster.

Tohoku Electric apparently decided it was impossible to go through with the construction plan amid strong local opposition following the triple meltdowns at the Fukushima No. 1 plant. The utility will exclude the plan from its supply plan for fiscal 2013 to be released later Thursday. Like this: Like Loading... Abe's advisory council calls for early restart of nuclear reactors. Private-sector members in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's economic growth council have submitted a proposal calling for the early restart of idled nuclear reactors despite continued public resistance.

The proposal was compiled by an Industrial Competitiveness Council subcommittee and submitted to the council at a meeting on March 29. The council is currently discussing Abe's growth strategy, and the subcommittee, led by Yasuhiro Sato, president of Mizuho Financial Group Inc., has been tasked with tackling issues in the electric power industry. The proposal outlines measures that will be described in the government's growth strategy, including the promotion of renewable energy, such as wind power, and higher-efficiency of thermal power generation, as well as the separation of electricity transmission from generation.

According to the subcommittee, nuclear power plants are needed to fill the role of providing cheap, reliable energy. However, discussions on the issue did not progress. Japon : plaidoyer pour l'abandon du nucléaire.