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  • 10
    Apr
    2013
    11:09am, EDT

    After earthquake, Iran says it will build more nuclear reactors in region

    EPA / Mohamad Fatemi

    A woman sits on rubble in Shonbeh, Bushehr province, in southern Iran on Tuesday after a magnitude-6.3 earthquake devastated villages, killed 37 people and injured more than 900. Despite sitting on an earthquake hotbed, Iran said it would continue to build nuclear reactors.

    By Yeganeh Torbati, Reuters

    Iran plans to build more nuclear reactors in an earthquake-prone coastal area, Iranian media said on Wednesday, a day after a strong tremor struck the region close to its only existing such plant.

    Tuesday's 6.3-magnitude quake hit 55 miles southeast of the port of Bushehr, killing 37 people and injuring more than 900 as it flattened small villages. The dead included eight children under the age of 10.

    But the nuclear power station 11 miles south of Bushehr was unaffected, according to Iranian officials and the Russian company that built the facility.

    Tehran has repeatedly rejected safety concerns about Bushehr, which is located in a highly seismic area on Iran's gulf coast and began operations in 2011 after decades of delays.

    The head of the Islamic state's Atomic Energy Organization said hours after the earthquake that more reactors would be built there.

    EPA / Abedin Taherkenareh

    The Bushehr nuclear power station is shown in 2010, a year before it opened. Iran says the reactor was not damaged in Tuesday's powerful earthquake, but its location atop a fault zone has caused concern. Nonetheless, the country says it will continue to build nuclear plants in the region.

    "This earthquake had no impact on the Bushehr nuclear power plant installation," Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani told state television late on Tuesday in comments published by the semi-official Mehr News Agency on Wednesday.

    "Not only was the power plant not producing electricity or sending it to the grid at the time, but even while operating the Bushehr power plant has been designed to withstand earthquakes of more than 8.0 on the Richter scale," he said.

    The Bushehr site is capable of holding six power reactors and construction of two more units of at least 1,000 megawatts will start in the "near future" there, he said. Iran has identified 16 sites elsewhere in the country suitable for other atomic plants.

    Iran sits on major fault lines and has suffered several devastating earthquakes, including a 6.6-magnitude quake in 2003 that flattened the southeastern city of Bam and killed more than 25,000 people. In August, more than 300 people were killed when two quakes struck the country's northwest.

    Dozens of aftershocks were detected in the hours following the initial quake, and a 5.2-magnitude quake struck on Wednesday with an epicenter 65 miles from Bushehr, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

    About 92 villages were affected by Tuesday's quake, said Mahmoud Mozaffar, a Red Crescent official, Iran's ISNA news agency reported. About 120 people had injuries severe enough to be admitted to hospital, Iranian officials said.

    About 800 homes were destroyed, said Hassan Ghadami of Iran's crisis-management organization. Many village homes are built out of mud brick, which can crumble easily.

    Initial damage was estimated at $43 million, provincial official Shapour Rostami said.

    The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said on Wednesday that Iranian authorities had made no request for international assistance. Iran's Red Crescent had sent 100 relief workers and three helicopters from neighboring provinces to the area, OCHA said.

    Slideshow: Everyday life in Iran

    At schools, in shops, and on the streets of big cities and small towns, daily life plays out in Iran.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    PhotoBlog: Earthquake kills at least 37 in Iran

    'Devastating' quake strikes near Iran's nuclear plant

    Diplomat: Iran, West 'a long way apart'

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    57 comments

    Iran is saying they will build nuclear reactors plants in earthquake prone areas. If this is accurate reporting then what can one say to that? If this plan is true then it would appear that the person in this country making these decisions is clearly insane.

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    Explore related topics: iran, earthquake, nuclear, power, disaster, featured, bushehr, reactor
  • 31
    Jul
    2012
    12:04pm, EDT

    Lights out for 600 million in India power grid failure

    Bikas Das / AP

    An Indian barber holding a candle, cut hair for a customer at his shop in Kolkata, India, July 31. India's energy crisis cascaded over half the country Tuesday when three of its regional grids collapsed, leaving 620 million people without government-supplied electricity for several hours in, by far, the world's biggest blackout.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    Indian women and children wait inside a darkened train carriage at a railway station in New Delhi on July 31. A massive power failure hit India for the second day running as three regional power grids collapsed, blacking out more than half the country in a crisis affecting over 600 million people.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    A passenger looks through the window of a train as he waits for electricity to be restored at a railway station in New Delhi July 31. Grid failure hit India for a second day on Tuesday, cutting power to hundreds of millions of people in the populous northern and eastern states including the capital Delhi and major cities such as Kolkata.

    Prakash Singh / AFP - Getty Images

    Traffic crawls in Connaught Place in New Delhi July 31, as the situation worsened in the afternoon after signals stopped functioning following a failure in the Northern Power Grid. A massive power failure hit India for the second day running as three regional power grids collapsed, blacking out more than half the country in a crisis affecting over 600 million people.

     View more images of the power outage in India here.

     

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: india, power, electricity, world-news
  • 30
    Jul
    2012
    2:45pm, EDT

    Massive India blackout leaves 300 million without power

    Parivartan Sharma / Reuters

    Muslim girls study in the light of candles inside a madrasa, or religious school, during power-cut in Noida on the outskirts of New Delhi, on July 30. Grid failure left more than 300 million people without power in New Delhi and much of northern India for hours on Monday in the worst blackout for more than a decade, highlighting chronic infrastructure woes holding back Asia's third-largest economy.

    Altaf Qadri / AP

    An Indian passenger sits as others sleep inside the compartment of a stationary train following the power outage that struck in the early hours of Monday, on July 30, at a train station in New Delhi, India. A major power outage has struck northern India, plunging cities into darkness and stranding hundreds of thousands of commuters.

    Reuters reports -- A massive grid failure in Delhi and much of northern India left more than 300 million people without electricity on Monday in one of the worst blackouts to hit the country in more than a decade.

    The lights in Delhi and seven states went out about 2 a.m and had not been restored by the morning rush-hour, leaving the capital's workers sweltering overnight, then stranded at metro stations in the morning as trains were cancelled.

    Continue reading.

    Prakash Singh / AFP - Getty Images

    Indian passengers wait for their train at a railway station following an overnight power outage in New Delhi, on July 30.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures 

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: india, power, blackout, new-delhi, electricity, world-news
  • 27
    May
    2012
    8:31am, EDT

    Iran state TV: We'll build second nuclear plant

    By msnbc.com staff

    Iran is to build a second nuclear power plant in the southern city of Bushehr, by early 2014, state television reported Sunday, according to news reports.

    "Iran will build a 1,000-megawatt nuclear power plant in Bushehr next year," state television quoted Fereydoon Abbasi Davani, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation, as saying, according to a report on Afghanistan news site Tolo News.


    He was referring to the Iranian calendar year, running from March 2013 to March 2014, the site said.

    The current Bushehr nuclear plant was started by German engineers in the 1970s, before Iran's Islamic Revolution, and was completed by Russia, which continues to help keep it running and provides fuel for it, Tolo News said.

    Iran has repeatedly said in recent years that it is planning to build more nuclear power plants but nothing has been offered to show that any work is under way, according to a report by The Associated Press.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • UN: 32 children, dozens of adults killed in Syrian town
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    • Scotland launches independence campaign with 007's support
    • Runoff could take Egypt's voters on one of two very different paths
    • Leftist tipped to be next Greek leader warns of 'Cold War' over austerity

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    92 comments

    No one is arguing that Iran can not build nuclear power plants to use for energy. That is not the issue. The issue is their pursuit of nuclear weapons, which is entirely different than building a power plant.

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    Explore related topics: energy, un, middle-east, iran, nuclear, iaea, power, featured
  • 4
    May
    2012
    3:48am, EDT

    'Can it be the end of nuclear power?' Japan to shut down last reactor

    By Reuters

    TOKYO -- Japan shuts down its last working nuclear power reactor this weekend just over a year after a tsunami scarred the nation and if it survives the summer without major electricity shortages, producers fear the plants will stay offline for good. 

    The shutdown leaves Japan without nuclear power for the first time since 1970 and has put electricity producers on the defensive. Public opposition to nuclear power could become more deeply entrenched if non-nuclear generation proves enough to meet Japan's needs in the peak-demand summer months.


    "Can it be the end of nuclear power? It could be," said Andrew DeWit, a professor at Rikkyo University in Tokyo who studies energy policy. "That's one reason why people are fighting it to the death."

    Slideshow: Then-and-now: Tsunami cleanup

    AP

    View side-by-side the progress that Japan has made since the tsunami and earthquake in March 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    Japan managed to get through the summer last year without any blackouts by imposing curbs on use in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami. Factories operated at night and during weekends to avoid putting too much stress on the country's power grids. A similar success this year would weaken the argument of proponents of nuclear power. 

    "They don't have the polls on their side," said DeWit. "Once they go through the summer without reactors, how will they fire them up? They know that, so they will try their darndest but I don't see how."

    Rock Center: One year after Fukushima disaster, town remains frozen in time

    Japan has 54 nuclear power reactors, including the four at Tokyo Electric's Daiichi plant in Fukushima that were damaged in the earthquake and tsunami, culminating in three meltdowns and radiation leaks for the worst civilian nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986. 

     

    One by one the country's nuclear plants have been shut for scheduled maintenance and prevented from restarting because of public concern about their safety. 

    Nearly a year after an earthquake and tsunami devastated Japan, Fukushima City residents fear the radiation is spreading outside of the government mandated exclusion zone. The government has asked residents to bury radiated soil in their own backyards, but how dangerous is the dirt and where should it go? NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel reports.

    The last one running, the No3 Tomari reactor of Hokkaido Electric Power Co in northern Japan, is scheduled to shut down early on Sunday. Anti-nuclear activists will celebrate with demonstrations over the weekend.

    'Mass suicide'?
    The last time Japan went without nuclear power was in May 1970, when the country's only two reactors operating at that time were shut for maintenance, the Federation of Electric Power Companies of Japan says.

    Nuclear power provided almost 30 percent of the electricity to keep the $5 trillion economy going before the March 11, 2011 disaster that killed almost 16,000 people and left more than 3,000 missing.

    A year on, the level of public concern about the safety of the industry is such that the government is still struggling to come up with a long-term energy policy, a delay having a profound impact on the economy and underlining just how costly it will be to contemplate a nuclear-power-free future. 

    Having boomed in recent decades on the exports prowess of big brands like Sony, Toyota and Canon, the economy suffered its first trade deficit in more than three decades in 2011 as power producers spent billions of dollars on oil-and-gas imports to fuel extra generation capacity.

    Water leaks found at Japan's stricken Fukushima nuclear plant

    At the time of the Fukushima crisis, then Prime Minister Naoto Kan called on Japan to wean itself off of nuclear power. Up to that point, Japan had been planning to lift the share of nuclear generation to over 50 percent by 2030 from about 30 percent. 

    The government of current Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has softened Kan's call. Noda says Japan cannot afford to be nuclear free, although he still holds that as an ideal. 

    But the government has no clear timetable for getting nuclear power back up and running as it tries to navigate the public opposition -- rare in Japan -- and the demands of business that wants a stable supply of power. 

    Cabinet ministers last month rushed to try to win over the public to allow the restart of two nuclear power reactors at Kansai Electric Power Co's Ohi plant in western Japan, in what experts said was a recognition of the implications of a nuclear-free summer. 

    The public remained unconvinced. A poll by Kyodo news agency last weekend showed about 60 percent of the public opposed to restarting the two reactors. 

    Most mayors and governors whose communities host nuclear plants want safety assurances beyond government-imposed stress tests before agreeing to restarts, a Reuters poll showed in March. 

    Slideshow: Triple tragedy for Japan

    Kuni Takahashi / Kuni Takahashi

    An earthquake, a tsunami, a nuclear meltdown -- residents of Japan's northeast coast suffered through three intertwined disasters after a massive 9.0 magnitude temblor struck off the coast on March 11, 2001.

    Launch slideshow

    To overcome the opposition, some politicians have been more forceful. Yo@!$%#o Sengoku, the acting president of the ruling Democratic Party of Japan, on April 16 called an abandonment of nuclear energy the equivalent of "mass suicide," Kyodo news reported. His comment was criticized by Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura, indicating internal divisions over how to handle the issue.

    Trade Minister Yukio Edano - the government's point man for energy policy - walks a fine line, saying both that safety must come first while trying to win the support of local communities for restarts.

    Kansai Electric Power Co, the utility most reliant on nuclear power, and some other electricity producers have warned of power shortages this summer but have largely avoided lobbying publicly for restarts for fear of a backlash.

    Global shift on nuke power 
    Ultimately, some argue Japan's economy, already weakened by years of deflation, would suffer if reactors are not restarted.

    "It's not an option Japan should take. There will be less employment and the economy will be on a shrinking trend," said Takeo Kikkawa, a professor at Hitotsubashi University.

    Nearly a year after an earthquake and tsunami devastated Japan, NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel journeys to a place still frozen in the moments after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake struck. Engel visits the exclusion zone surrounding Japan's damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Factories, homes, restaurants and farms remain as they were when people abandoned their homes and livelihoods for safety. 

    Japan's liquefied natural gas imports climbed 18 percent in volume and 52 percent in value to 5.4 trillion yen ($67 billion) in the year through March. 

    Renewable energy, although given emphasis in energy policies being formulated, is not expected to be much of an immediate salve. Energy from renewable sources account for about 10 percent of Japan's power generation, most of that from hydroelectric dams. Wind and solar together contribute about 1 percent. 

    Worldwide, there has been a shift with Germany, Italy and Switzerland moving away from atomic energy, prompting the International Atomic Energy Agency to revise down its forecast for growth in the industry.

    Greenpeace 'bombs' French nuclear reactor -- could it happen in US?

    The United States, China and India are still planning to increase the number of reactors.

    In Japan, a delay in setting up a new, more independent Nuclear Regulatory Agency due to deadlock in a divided parliament is further clouding the outlook.

    Some analysts say the government is not going to turn public opinion unless it admits that nuclear power is never going to be absolutely safe.

    "The debate needs to be recast," said Bob Geller, a professor of geophysics at Tokyo University. "They have to come clean, and say, in effect - look we know they're not perfectly safe but we've made a careful evaluation of the risks, which we'll make public." 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Bin Laden fretted about al-Qaida affiliates' missteps, letters show
    • Blind activist Chen Guangcheng: 'I want to leave China on Hillary Clinton's plane'
    • 'A little fixing up'? Philippines hides slum behind wall ahead of poverty conference
    • Sarkozy fails to floor Hollande in France election television debate
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    • Catholic priest: I've been secretly married for a year
    • Five years on, parents of missing Madeleine McCann cling to hope

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    246 comments

    Awesome! Let public uninformed mob mentality dictate policy. Yeah who needs clean energy? Brilliant, just built coal power plants instead. Trade the possibility for health and environment concerns for guaranteed health and environment problems. I mean coal is infinite right? And nuclear is far cheap …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: energy, japan, plant, earthquake, nuclear, tsunami, power, featured, reactor
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    10:16am, EDT

    Blackout nation: fault leaves Cyprus without power

    By msnbc.com staff

    The whole of Cyprus woke up without electricity Wednesday after a problem at one of its power plants resulted in the entire grid shutting down, according to local media reports.

    A malfunction at the Mediterranean nation's main Dhekelia power station in the early hours of the morning, triggering breakdowns throughout the system, was blamed for the black-out, according to the English language Cyprus Mail newspaper.


    The outage caused massive traffic jams during the morning rush hour, with police scrambling to control intersections where lack of traffic lights confused and angered motorists, Agence France Press reported.

    Turkey says could annex north if Cyprus stays split

    Cyprus's electricity resources are already stretched after its main power generating facility at Vassilikos was almost destroyed in an accidental explosion in 2011 that left 12 people dead. The Famagusta Gazette said last year's explosion occurred in containers, full of munitions, that Cyprus had confiscated from a vessel sailing from Iran to Syria.

    London’s Daily Telegraph said Wednesday’s outage forced authorities to put ageing stations back online and to get supplies from the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state which lies north of a ceasefire line splitting the war-divided island. 

    Cyprus has a population of about 800,000.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    82 comments

    where lack of traffic lights confused and angered motorists When people cannot cope with various difficulties of modern life, or respond with anger, we're headed for trouble.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, energy, middle-east, power, cyprus
  • 21
    Jan
    2012
    8:47pm, EST

    Report: Japan kept secret about scary nuclear scenario

    By msnbc.com staff

    The Japanese government kept secret for months a worst-case scenario report predicting a massive release of radioactive materials for a year at the earthquake-crippled Fukushima Daiichi power plant, goverment sources told the Kyodo news agency.

    The report, shown first to just a small group of policy makers in late March, said a hydrogen explosion would tear through the No. 1 reactor's containment vessel and force all workers to flee lethal radiation levels. It said residents within 105 miles of the plant would be forced to evacuate. A voluntary evacuation zone would have included Tokyo, about 140 miles away.

    There would be no time to carry out needed evacuations, sources said, and officials did not want to spur anxiety, according to the Kyodo article published by the Japan Times.

    "The content was so shocking that we decided to treat it as if it didn't exist," a senior government official said.

    Then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan decided to quietly bury the report, the sources said. His successor, Yoshihiko Noda, changed the document's status after it leaked so it would become public late last year. 

    Three of six reactors at the Fukushima plant melted down after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami knocked out the plant's cooling systems and set off the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Thai man marries dead girlfriend, posts to YouTube
    • Woman's body found in submerged Italy cruise ship
    • Syria's capital delivers show of support for Assad
    • Slideshow: Slices of life in Iran
    • After drone hit on al-Qaida planner, is Zawahiri next?

     

    323 comments

    There seems to be a denial mentality.... If we deny a crisis, it doesn't exist. This is analogous to denying the risk of an earthquake of greater than magnitude 7 - if we deny it, it won't occur. Well, guess what? - it did occur, and now a chunk of Japan is a radioactive wasteland.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, nuclear, power, featured

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