Japan plans tougher nuclear security ahead of summit
Japan said on Friday it plans to strengthen security at nuclear power plants following
recommendations from the International Atomic Energy Agency, a month before a nuclear
security summit in neighbouring South Korea.
Japan is home to 54 commercial nuclear reactors, all but two of which are now out of
operation. Public concern has kept those under maintenance from restarting following an
earthquake and tsunami last March which triggered the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25
years.
From March, operators of nuclear power plants and other nuclear facilities will have to
prepare batteries and other devices to prevent power loss of equipment monitoring nuclear
fuel in the event of a terrorist attack, said Trade Minister Yukio Edano and an official at
Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.
They will have to install more metal and nuclear material detectors at exits and build new
fences surrounding facilities to improve security and prevent theft of nuclear materials,
the official said.
Japan, based on existing IAEA recommendations, has already taken some steps but its nuclear
security is still considered relatively lax.
In a survey by the Nuclear Threat Initiative that assessed atomic security in 32 countries
with vulnerable nuclear materials, Japan came in at 23 -- lower than the United States at
13 but higher than China at 27.
Tokyo Electric Power Co, the operator of the quake-crippled Fukushima plant, drew criticism
over its loose security after it was unable to get in touch with workers hired to contain
radiation during last year's crisis.
The Fukushima disaster highlighted the vulnerability of nuclear plants and the scale of
damage in the event of a terrorist attack.
In 2010, U.S. President Barack Obama hosted the first global nuclear security summit in
Washington. The second summit is to take place in Seoul from March 26-27.