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Thread: Japan without nuclear power for first time in 42 years

  1. Post #1

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    Default Japan without nuclear power for first time in 42 years

    ...ok so what are they going use to make up for that loss of power now??


    TOKYO – Thousands of Japanese marched to celebrate the switching off of the last of their nation's 50 nuclear reactors Saturday, waving banners shaped as giant fish that have become a potent anti-nuclear symbol.

    Japan was without electricity from nuclear power for the first time in four decades when the reactor at Tomari nuclear plant on the northern island of Hokkaido went offline for mandatory routine maintenance.

    After last year's March 11 quake and tsunami set off meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, no reactor halted for checkups has been restarted amid public worries about the safety of nuclear technology.

    "Today is a historic day," Masashi Ishikawa shouted to a crowd gathered at a Tokyo park, some holding traditional "koinobori" carp-shaped banners for Children's Day that have become a symbol of the anti-nuclear movement.

    "There are so many nuclear plants, but not a single one will be up and running today, and that's because of our efforts," Ishikawa said.

    The activists said it is fitting that the day Japan stopped nuclear power coincides with Children's Day because of their concerns about protecting children from radiation, which Fukushima Dai-ichi is still spewing into the air and water.

    The government has been eager to restart nuclear reactors, warning about blackouts and rising carbon emissions as Japan is forced to turn to oil and gas for energy.

    Japan now requires reactors to pass new tests to withstand quakes and tsunami and to gain local residents' approval before restarting.

    The response from people living near nuclear plants has been mixed, with some wanting them back in operation because of jobs, subsidies and other benefits to the local economy.

    The mayor of Tomari city, Hiroomi Makino, is among those who support nuclear power.

    "There may be various ways of thinking but it's extremely regrettable," he said of the shutdown.

    Major protests, like the one Saturday, have been generally limited to urban areas like Tokyo, which had received electricity from faraway nuclear plants, including Fukushima Dai-ichi.

    Before the nuclear crisis, Japan relied on nuclear power for a third of its electricity.

    The crowd at the anti-nuclear rally, estimated at 5,500 by organizers, shrugged off government warnings about a power shortage. If anything, they said, with the reactors going offline one by one, it was clear the nation didn't really need nuclear power.

    Whether Japan will suffer a sharp power crunch is still unclear.

    Electricity shortages are expected only at peak periods, such as the middle of the day in hot weather, and critics of nuclear power say proponents are exaggerating the consequences to win public approval to restart reactors.

    Hokkaido Electric Power Co. spokesman Hisatoshi Kibayashi said the shutdown was completed late Saturday.

    The Hokkaido Tomari plant has three reactors, but the other two had been halted earlier. Before March 11 last year, the nation had 54 nuclear reactors, but four of the six reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi are being decommissioned because of the disaster.

    Yoko Kataoka, a retired baker who was dancing to the music at the rally waving a small paper carp, said she was happy the reactor was being turned off.

    "Let's leave an Earth where our children and grandchildren can all play without worries," she said, wearing a shirt that had, "No thank you, nukes," handwritten on the back.



    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/05...#ixzz1u22Of3iV
    Slow is smooth.....smooth is fast...

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    Default Re: Japan without nuclear power for first time in 42 years

    Let 'em go back to the stone age then. Stupid motherf&$%ers. Let them burn wood and coal to stay warm at night. Let them heat their meals by fire. Let them refrigerate their food with large chunks of ice delivered daily on the backs of mules. Who really gives a flying f%$k? Idiot bastard liberals who are embracing this green movement will be the first pantywastes to start crying when their cell phones stop working and they can't nuke up their Ramen noodles. Welcome to "progress" comrades. You have now been officially brainwashed, er, indocrinated. Dumbazzes.
    Ineptocracy (in-ept-o-cra-cy)—a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers.

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    Default Re: Japan without nuclear power for first time in 42 years

    Quote Originally Posted by CiscoKid View Post
    Let 'em go back to the stone age then. Stupid motherf&$%ers. Let them burn wood and coal to stay warm at night. Let them heat their meals by fire. Let them refrigerate their food with large chunks of ice delivered daily on the backs of mules. Who really gives a flying f%$k? Idiot bastard liberals who are embracing this green movement will be the first pantywastes to start crying when their cell phones stop working and they can't nuke up their Ramen noodles. Welcome to "progress" comrades. You have now been officially brainwashed, er, indocrinated. Dumbazzes.
    Well, Huh?

    Nuclear Power is the most dumb-ass way of boiling water ever thought of.

    It is a completely government financed boondoggle, from the grants and loans that set it up, to the government paid for "insurance" that will never compensate for the losses already experienced in Japan, to the government "promising" to take care of a tar baby that is deadly for tens of thousands of years but somehow they have no farking clue as to what to do with (nuclear waste).


    What is the cost of a guarding and securing a pile of **** that will remain deadly for tens of thousands of years? Japan now has 50 of them.

    Solar is a boondoggle as well, but it looks like a free market compared to nuclear power.

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