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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Another S. Korea nuclear reactor shuts down
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Aug 21, 2013


S. Korea's Asiana to cancel Fukushima flights
Seoul (AFP) Aug 21, 2013 - South Korea's second-largest carrier Asiana Airlines said Wednesday it was cancelling charter flights to Fukushima in Japan from October due to radiation fears from the crippled nuclear plant there.

Asiana currently operates two return flights a month to Fukushima under a lease deal that expires at the end of September.

"The service will be halted in October and a decision will then be taken on whether to extend the cancellation depending on conditions," an Asian spokeswoman told AFP.

"Passengers are clearly anxious and we are paying close attention to all reports on nuclear reactor pollution levels at Fukushima," the spokeswoman said.

Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operates the Fukushima facility, said Tuesday that 300 tonnes of radioactive water were believed to have leaked from a tank at the nuclear plant.

Since a quake-generated tsunami struck Fukushima in March 2011, knocking out reactor cooling systems and sparking meltdowns, there have been four similar leaks from tanks of the same design.

A reactor at one of South Korea's largest nuclear plants shut down Wednesday, officials said, at a time of creeping public anxiety over safety in the country's nuclear industry.

The reactor, one of six at the Yeonggwang complex in the southwest of the country, shut down at 2:44pm (0544 GMT), a spokesman for the Korea Hydro and Power Co. told AFP.

"The cause of the stoppage is as yet unknown and investigations are underway. We don't know when it will resume operations," the spokesman said.

He stressed there was no sign of any radiation leak.

South Korea has 23 reactors which are meant to meet more than 30 percent of electricity needs. But the sector is currently undergoing a crisis of confidence following a series of shutdowns and a scandal involving parts provided with fake safety certificates

Wednesday's incident brings to seven the total number of reactors currently offline.

State prosecutors have launched an extensive probe into the safety certificate fraud, which forced the shutdown of two reactors in May and delayed the scheduled start of operations at two more.

Last year, officials said eight suppliers were found to have faked warranties covering thousands of items used in a number of reactors.

The scandal further undermined public confidence already shaken by the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan and its ongoing repercussions.

Despite the concern, the government has vowed to push ahead with its nuclear power programme and plans to build an additional 16 reactors by 2030.

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Japan upgrades Fukushima leak to highest level in two years
Tokyo, Japan (AFP) Aug 21, 2013
Japan declared a radioactive water leak at the crippled Fukushima plant a level-three "serious incident" Wednesday, its highest warning in two years, as operators scrambled to seal a tank that has seeped 300 tonnes of toxic water. The leak is the worst since the nuclear crisis began in March 2011, when a quake-generated tsunami knocked out reactor cooling systems and sparked meltdowns. " ... read more


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