05 May 2012, on the northern big island of Hokkaido, Japan’s last operating nuclear reactor is being shut down.
By Saturday night (Japan time), and after 42 years, the country will be free of electricity produced by nuclear reactors.
The Hokkaido Electric Power Company is shutting down Reactor 3 of the Tomari Nuclear Power Plant. The reactor will be completely shut down by 02:00 hours Sunday morning.
While the Tomari reactor is not scheduled for re-start, those that are have been blocked by local governments. In Japan the local governments have the final word on reactor re-start, and because of the on going disaster reactors at Fukushima Daiichi, the majority of people in Japan are against re-starting any reactors.
For the summer of 2011 Japan’s domestic industries suffered greatly because of an electrical power shortage, even with 37 reactors operating. Now Japan is heading into summer 2012, with not one nuclear reactor up and running. National officials are scrambling to find ways to convince the local governments to re-start reactors.
There has been a push for wind power, but, just like here in the United States, there’s been a backlash of people who are against it because those windmills are “eyesores” and reduce property value.