Japan’s biggest utility flicked on a reactor for the first time since Fukushima—then flicked it right back off. The 1.35 GW Kashiwazaki-Kariwa No. 6 lasted only hours before a control-rod fault froze the restart, exposing how fragile the country’s nuclear revival still is.
What happened inside the world’s biggest plant
At 02:00 local time Thursday, operators began withdrawing control rods from the 1.35 GW boiling-water reactor. By 08:00 the rods stopped moving, triggering an automatic hold on the startup sequence. TEPCO says no radiation leaked and the reactor remains sub-critical, but the company has not forecast a new restart date.
Why control-rod glitches matter
Control rods are the last line of defense in any reactor: boron or hafnium blades that absorb neutrons and throttle the chain reaction. A mechanical hang-up can indicate warped drive shafts, degraded seals, or lubrication issues—any of which can cascade into scram delays if not fixed. For TEPCO, still haunted by Fukushima’s 22 trillion yen cleanup bill, even a minor fault triggers full-stop protocols.
The stakes behind Japan’s nuclear reboot
- Grid strain: A heat wave last summer pushed Tokyo’s reserve margin below 3 %, forcing the government to issue “save power” alerts.
- Fuel bills: LNG imports cost Japan an extra $30 billion in 2025 after Russian supply rerouting.
- Climate math: The 2030 target of 50 % nuclear-plus-renewables is slipping; every offline reactor adds 1–2 Mt CO₂/yr.
Kashiwazaki-Kariwa’s seven units totaled 8 GW before 2011—enough for 8 % of national demand. Restarting even two reactors would shave roughly 6 Mt CO₂ annually, equivalent to closing three gas-fired stations.
TEPCO’s credibility on the line
Fourteen other Japanese reactors have returned since 2015, but none belong to TEPCO. Regulators imposed extra inspections on the utility after investigations faulted its safety culture for Fukushima. Approval for No. 6 came only after a five-year court battle and a Niigata prefecture governor who conditioned restart on decommissioning older units.
What developers and grid planners watch next
- Digital twin rollout: TEPCO is piloting Siemens–developed rod-position sensors that stream live torque data. A firmware update is expected within 30 days.
- Insurance premiums: Each month of delay adds an estimated ¥2 billion in fuel-hedge costs, insurers told AP.
- Supply-chain squeeze: Japan Steel Works, sole maker of forged reactor vessels, has a 26-month order backlog; any redesign of rod-drive housings could ripple across global projects.
Community reaction: relief and frustration
Fishermen in Kashiwazaki welcomed the pause, fearing seawater intake would warm local spawning grounds. Meanwhile, data-center operators in Tokyo—facing 200 MW shortfalls by 2027—privately urged the trade ministry to fast-track a second inspection, citing redundancy needs for AI workloads.
Bottom line
The control-rod snag is technically minor but symbolically massive. It proves that Japan’s nuclear revival hinges not on policy speeches but on flawless mechanical execution. Until TEPCO demonstrates zero-tolerance reliability, every restart will be a cliffhanger for both the grid and global climate accounting.
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