While Government of Japan promotes nuclear policy of
resuming some nuclear power plants, the people in the area suffered from radioactive
materials emitted by broken First Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant are still
living with great amount of contaminated soil, grass or trees. Although the
government decided that those contaminated wastes should be treated by each
prefecture, programs to build processing facilities are deadlocked by firm
opposition by the residents. The government is facing a necessity for changing
their plan.
Ministry of Environment designated radioactive waste, caused
by the accident in Fukushima, with 8,000 Becquerel per kilogram or more as
necessary to be under control of public sector. Concerning firm opposition from
Fukushima, if those waste would be concentrated to Fukushima, the ministry
decided that the disseminated waste should be processed in each prefecture.
Among five prefectures around Fukushima in need of building
processing facility, Miyagi and Tochigi have been seeing strong protest of the
residents. In Tochigi, although the ministry determined the place for the
facility in Shioya Town, the people there organized broad movement against the
plan. They pointed out fundamental contradiction of Ministry of Environment
that it was building environmentally harmful facility in the place close to a
water source which the ministry had formerly registered as a pure water source
to be protected.
Chiba has been regarded as the place where the facility
would be build first. Tokyo Electric Power Company offered an unused land in
Chiba city for the facility. But, residents started protesting activities,
arguing that the reason of selecting the place was unclear or liquidation
caused by great earthquake would be concerned. Two thousand metric tons of
radioactive waste in Chiba has still no way to go.
Now, the question is whether the decision of Ministry of
Environment to process radioactive waste in each prefecture was right or wrong.
The lawmakers passed a law which determined that national government would deal
with radioactive waste caused by Fukushima accident. But the law did not
require each prefecture to build processing facility. It was bureaucrats who
made the plan to demand each prefecture to build it. There has been no viable
explanation why each prefecture has to be responsible for the solution.
This is a typical example of negative aspect of top-down
style bureaucracy in Japan. The key is whether bureaucrats would admit their wrong
decision and change the course to plan B.
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