I just spoke on the phone with Oizumi. He's asked us to buy him some radiation meters, and we've finally been able to find ones that are appropriate. I'll tell you how he's going to use them below, but first, here's what he reported about nuclear power in Japan.
"There are 54 nuclear reactors total in Japan. Only 14 are currently in operation. Since the earthquake and tsunami and the meltdown at Fukushima, they [the government or electric companies] have not been able to restart a single one. All the planned reactors that are in the pipeline to be built have been halted."
I asked Oizumi if he thought that if the conservative party [the LDP] got back into power that they would be able to restart those plants.
He said, "That's not going to be so easy to do, the citizen's movement is too powerful."
So that's good news. And I should say, Oizumi (who you can read about in Chapter One of the book) is not at all prone to wishful thinking or blind optimism.
Still, of course, there is terrible nuclear poisoning that has happened in Japan, and good and trustworthy data is very hard to get. (Remember the government and Tokyo electric swore that there had not been any radiation at all released in the first week after the tsunami. In fact, there were three full meltdowns.)
Oizumi said that he and the others in the local citizens movement (Oizumi lives in Central Japan, near the city of Nagoya which is between Tokyo and Osaka) are forming a group to monitor radiation levels, and have gotten a very large and sophisticated radiation monitor. The seven devices that we are buying for him and sending there will be sent to Fukushima, to Miyagi prefecture, and to the plant in Hamaoka.
The best news however, is that through conservation and the reduction in electricity use in Japan since the disaster there have been no power outages. Oizumi said, "By turning down air conditioners and reducing power usage, Japan has had enough power. And that means that we do not need any more nuclear power stations, and that we do not need to restart any of the closed ones. We have enough."
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| San Oizumi, anti-nuclear activist profiled in Chapter One of A Different Kind of Luxury |
I asked Oizumi if he thought that if the conservative party [the LDP] got back into power that they would be able to restart those plants.
He said, "That's not going to be so easy to do, the citizen's movement is too powerful."
So that's good news. And I should say, Oizumi (who you can read about in Chapter One of the book) is not at all prone to wishful thinking or blind optimism.
Oizumi said that he and the others in the local citizens movement (Oizumi lives in Central Japan, near the city of Nagoya which is between Tokyo and Osaka) are forming a group to monitor radiation levels, and have gotten a very large and sophisticated radiation monitor. The seven devices that we are buying for him and sending there will be sent to Fukushima, to Miyagi prefecture, and to the plant in Hamaoka.
| Oizumi with his second daughter |
The best news however, is that through conservation and the reduction in electricity use in Japan since the disaster there have been no power outages. Oizumi said, "By turning down air conditioners and reducing power usage, Japan has had enough power. And that means that we do not need any more nuclear power stations, and that we do not need to restart any of the closed ones. We have enough."
