Japan's nuclear watchdog has officially lifted its order banning the transfer of nuclear fuel within Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) Kashiwazaki-Kariwa power plant, reaffirming that the company is qualified as a nuclear power plant operator.
On Wednesday, the Nuclear Regulation Authority unanimously decided to revoke the effective operational ban after it approved a draft report submitted by its secretariat that revealed TEPCO had set up a system to improve the plant's anti-terrorism measures.
Concerns about climate change, national security, and unreliable electrical grids have pushed the world to recognize that nuclear power has long been wrongfully stigmatized in national and international debate. Nuclear power is a zero-carbon, reliable energy source, and is far safer than other alternatives, such as coal and natural gas, in terms of deaths resulting from accidents and pollution.
Though it would be easy to genuinely believe the revival of nuclear energy will solve ongoing crises, including climate breakdown, closer scrutiny shows an opposing reality. As atomic reactors risk being weaponized, nuclear power is less reliable or safe than its advocates claim. The world should be investing in weather-based renewable energy.