Japan s Challenges Towards Recovery

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2011/SOM2/018 Agenda Item: 1 Japan s Challenges Towards Recovery Purpose: Information Submitted by: Japan Second Senior Officials Meeting Big Sky, United States 17-18 May 2011

Japan s Challenges Towards Recovery May 17, 2011 Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry Government of Japan Table of Contents A. Japan Faces an Unprecedented Challenge (Enormous Earthquake, Tsunamis and Nuclear Accident) 1. Damage 2. Rescue Efforts and Foreign Assistance 3. Nuclear Power Stations B. Key Challenges 1. Cool Down the Reactors 2. Contain the Spread of Radioactive Substances (sea, soil and atmosphere) 3. Rigorous and Intensive Monitoring 4. Ensure the Safety of Food, Products, and On-site Workers C. Impact on Japanese Economy 1. Estimated Economic Damage and Plan for Reconstruction 2. Impact on Energy Supply/Demand in Japan 3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activities) D. Responsiveness to the World 1. Cooperation with International Organizations 2. Speedy Dissemination of Accurate Information 1 1

Great Support of the International Community Japan deeply appreciates the assistance offered from people all over the world. - 142 countries and regions - 39 international organizations - [Rescue teams] From 26 countries, regions and international organizations US Navy/US Pacific Command (Operation Tomodachi) Ministry of Defense 2 A. Japan Faces an Unprecedented Challenge (Enormous Earthquake, Tsunamis and Nuclear Accident) Tsunamis 14 meters or higher Earthquakes: M - 9.0 quake (March 11) M - 7 class 5 times M - 6 class 71 times M - 5 class 369 times TOKYO Fukushima Dai-ichi 3 2

1. Damage Casualties : over 30,000 Dead : over 14,000 Missing : over 9,000 Injured over 5,000 Evacuees : over 150,000 (As of May 10 th ) KYODO NEWS KYODO NEWS NOAA/US Dept of Commerce, http://wcatwc.arh.noaa.gov/ 4 2. Rescue Efforts and Foreign Assistance KYODO NEWS Ministry of Defense Ministry of Defense Ministry of Defense 5 3

3. Nuclear Power Stations Nuclear Reactors near Epicenter of the Earthquake 4 Nuclear Power Stations with 14 Units Onagawa Unit 1 524 MW, 1984- Unit 2 825 MW, 1995- Unit 3 825 MW, 2002- Fukushima Dai-ichi Unit 1 460 MW, 1971- Unit 2 784 MW, 1974- Unit 3 784 MW, 1976- Unit 4 784 MW, 1978- Unit 5 784 MW, 1978- Unit 6 1,100 MW, 1979- Fukushima Dai-ni Unit 1 1,100 MW, 1982- Unit 2 1,100 MW, 1984- Unit 3 1,100 MW, 1985- Unit 4 1,100 MW, 1987- Tokai Dai-ni Unit 1 1,100 MW, 1978- automatic shut down Periodical inspection cold shut down 6 3. Nuclear Power Stations Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station Before the Earthquake and Tsunamis After the Earthquake and Tsunamis TEPCO Air Photo Service Inc (Myoko, Niigata Japan) 7 4

3. Nuclear Power Stations Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station Cause of the Damage Huge Tsunami Grid Line 1 Loss of off-site power due to the earthquake 46 Meter 46 Meter Reactor Building About 40M About 20M Turbine Building GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Tsunami (estimated 14m) Diesel Generator 2 Diesel generator inoperable due to the tsunami All motor operated pumps including ECCS became inoperable Elevation: about 10m Seawater Pump Breakwater 5.4 ~5.7m Seawater level 8 3. Nuclear Power Stations Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station μsv/hour (As of May 9 th ) Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS Fukushima Dai-ni NPS 20 km radius of the plant and other designated areas no-entry zone, planned evacuation zone Other areas of the 30km radius of the plant (as a general rule) emergency evacuation preparation area 9 5

B. Key Challenges 1. Cool Down the Reactors 2. Contain the Spread of Radioactive Substances (sea, soil and atmosphere) 3. Rigorous and Intensive Monitoring 4. Ensure the Safety of Food, Products, and On-site Workers 10 1. Cool Down the Reactors (As of May 9 th ) Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Type / MW / Commercial Operation Status at time of Earthquake BWR / 460 / Mar 71- BWR / 784 / Jul 74- BWR / 784 / Mar 76- BWR / 784 / Oct 78- In Operation In Operation In Operation Periodical Inspection Outage Automatic Shutdown - Fresh Water Injection - Water Level [mm] -1,650 (A) -1,500 (A) -2,100(A) R (distance from the top of fuel) -1,700 (B) -2,100 (B) -2,150 (B) - V 1.401 (B)* 0.081 (D)* 0.01 (C)* Temperature -Feedwater Nozzle 115.8 * 115.6 210.4 * -Bottom Head of RPV 95.4 N/A 153 P Reactor Pressure[Mpa] 0.561 (A)* 0.078 (A)* 0.016 (A)* - - S Fresh Water Injection F Temperature P - 47 - - Building Damage Slight Damage Damage Damage AC Power (Lighting of Central Operation Room ** ) *Under monitoring of the change of the situation. 15 11 6

1. Cool Down the Reactors (Unit 1) (As of May 9 th ) Spray Emergency Diesel Generator Residual Heat Removal System TEPCO Damaged Damaged Spent Fuel Pool Cooling System The fuel pellets are presumed to be melting Recovered External Power (Mar.24- connected to the central control room) Fuel Bundle 400 Spent Fuel in the Pool 292 + 100 (new) Injecting fresh water or seawater Major Events Mar.12 - Venting started Mar.12 - Hydrogen explosion Mar.12 - Seawater injection to reactor core Mar.25 - Fresh water injection to reactor core Mar.29 - Fresh water injection using electrical pump Mar.31 - Fresh water spray by concrete pump trucks to spent fuel pool Apr. 7 - Injection of nitrogen to the primary containment vessel 12 1. Cool Down the Reactors (Unit 2) (As of May 9 th ) Spray Damaged Spent Fuel Pool Cooling System Fuel Bundle 548 Spent Fuel in the Pool 587 + 28 (new) Emergency Diesel Generator Residual Heat Removal System Ministry of Defense Damaged The fuel pellets are presumed to be melting Possible damage of the suppression chamber Recovered External Power (Mar.26- connected to the central control room) Injecting fresh water Injecting fresh water or seawater or seawater Major Events Mar.13 - Venting started Mar.14 - Seawater injection to reactor core Mar.15 - Sound of explosion Mar.20 - Seawater injection to spent fuel pool (SFP) Mar.26 - Fresh water injection to reactor core Mar.27- Fresh water injection using electrical pump Mar.29 - Fresh water injection to SFP 13 7

1. 1. Cool Down the Reactors (Unit 3) (As of 18:30 April 8th, 2011) (Unit 3) (As of May 9 th ) Damaged Spent Fuel Pool Cooling System Spray Fuel Bundle 548 Spent Fuel in the Pool 514 + 52 (new) Air Photo Service Inc (Myoko, Niigata Japan) Emergency Diesel Generator Residual Heat Removal System The fuel pellets are presumed to be melting Damaged Recovered External Power (Mar.22- connected to the central control room) Injecting fresh water or seawater Major Events Mar.13 - Venting started Mar.13 - Seawater injection to reactor core Mar.14 - Hydrogen explosion Mar.20 - Sprayed to spent fuel pool (SFP) by Tokyo Fire Department Mar.25 - Fresh water injection to reactor core Mar. 28- Fresh water injection using electrical pump Mar.29~ Fresh water spray by concrete pump trucks to SFP 14 8

1. Cool Down the Reactors 2. (Unit (Unit 4) 4) (As of 18:30 (As April of 8th, May 2011) 9 th ) Spray Damaged Spent Fuel Pool Cooling System Fuel Bundle 0 Spent Fuel in the Pool 1331 + 204 (new) Air Photo Service Inc (Myoko, Niigata Japan) Recovered External Power (Mar.29- connected to the central control room) No Fuel in Reactor Pressure Vessel Major Events Mar.15 - Fire occurred Mar.16 - Fire occurred Mar.20 - Seawater spray by Self- Defense Forces to spent fuel pool (SFP) Mar.25 - Seawater injection to SFP Mar.30 - Fresh water spray by concrete pump trucks to SFP 15 1. Cool Down the Reactors (Unit 5&6) (As of May 9 th ) Fuel Bundle Unit5 : 548 Spent Fuel in the Pool Unit 5 : 946 + 48 (new) Fuel Bundle Unit6 : 764 Spent Fuel in the Pool Unit 6: 876 + 64 (new) Functioning Spent Fuel Pool Cooling System KYODO NEWS Functioning External Power [Unit 5] Emergency Diesel Generator Residual Heat Removal System Recovered External Power [Unit 6] (Mar.22- connected to the central control room) 16 1

Other Nuclear Power Stations in the Tohoku Area Onagawa (3 Units) All units (Units 1-3) were immediately shut down automatically, then safely went into cold shutdown. Onagawa Fukushima Dai-ichi Fukushima Dai-ni Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc Tokai Dai-ni Fukushima Dai-ni (4 Units) Tokai Dai-ni (1 Unit) All units (Units 1-4) were immediately shut down automatically, then safely went to cold shut down. TEPCO The unit was immediately shut down automatically, then safely went to cold shut down. The Japan Atomic Power Company 17 Contain the Spread of Radioactive Substances (sea, soil and atmosphere) The Japanese Government and TEPCO are making the utmost efforts to prevent the dispersion of flow-out radioactive contaminated water. Radioactive waste treatment facility Megafloat Locking in radioactive materials by spraying synthetic resin Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Silt fence to block spread of contaminated water Unit 1 Contaminated water leak stopped Major Events Apr. 2 Highly contaminated water discovered leaking into the sea. Apr. 6 Leak of contaminated water into the sea was stopped. Apr. 12 Transfer of stagnant water in the trench of Unit2 to the condenser started. Apr. 14 Silt fence was installed to block the spread of contaminated water. Apr. 19 Transfer of stagnant water in the trench of Unit 2 to the radioactive waste treatment facilities started. 18 2

2. Contain the Spread of Radioactive Substances (Preventing the Spread of Water) (As of May 7 th ) Silt fences, steel plates, and sandbags with radioactive-substance absorption material have been installed to contain the spread of radioactive water. The Japanese Government and TEPCO carefully monitor seawater. :Monitoring Locations by TEPCO :Monitoring Locations by MEXT (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology) (As of May 7th) 30km 20km Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 15km Silt fences (Installed on 4/14) Steel plate (Installed on 4/15) Sandbags (Installed on 4/17) Sandbags containing Zeolite (Preparing) Steel sheet pile (Under Planning) 19 2. Contain the Spread of Radioactive Substances (sea, soil and atmosphere) Experts are making the utmost efforts to prevent dispersing radioactive substances contained in dust, debris and vapor. Spraying synthetic materials on the surface of the ground and debris to prevent radioactive substances dispersion TEPCO 20 3

Roadmap towards Restoration from the Accident (announced by TEPCO on Apr.17) Mar.11 Apr.17 Around 3 months Around 6~9 months Step 1 Step 2 Target [Reactors] [Spent Fuel Pools] [Contaminated Water] [Contaminated Atmosphere/Soil] Radiation dose in steady decline Stable cooling - Resume heat exchange function - [Unit 1,3] flood up to top of active fuel - [Unit 2] Seal the damaged location Stable cooling - Enhance reliability of water injection - Restore coolant circulation system - [Unit 4] Install supporting structure Secure storage place - Prevention of outflow to the outside of the site Prevention of spread Controlling release of radioactive materials (significant reduction of dose level) Achieve cold shutdown More stable cooling - Keep sufficient level of water by remote-control - Resume heat exchange function Decrease contaminated water (decontamination and desalt) Install reactor building cover 21 3. Rigorous and Intensive Monitoring TEPCO monitors radioactivity levels every 10 minutes and releases the results immediately. Radioactivity levels rose on March 15th, but have since fallen and remain low. Monitoring posts and the readings at the Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS Environmental Radioactivity Level at the Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS Unit 1~6 (μsv/h) (μsv/h) 12,000 Explosion in Unit2 Measurement point: Main Gate (1.0km from Unit2) or West Gate (1.1km from Unit2) Near West Gate 21.0 μsv/h 4,000 White smoke from Unit3 2,000 Grayish smoke from Unit3 0 Main Gate 53.0 μsv/h (as of 10:00 April 25th, 2011) TEPCO 22 4

Readings at Readings Monitoring at Posts Monitoring out of Fukushima Posts Dai-ichi NPS out of Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS μsv/hour (As of May 9 th ) Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS Fukushima Dai-ni NPS Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) 23 Atmospheric Readings within 100km (μsv/h) 30 μsv/hour 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 55 00 Fukushima 61km 13-Mar 14-Mar 15-Mar 16-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 20-Mar 21-Mar 22-Mar 23-Mar 24-Mar 25-Mar 26-Mar 27-Mar 28-Mar 29-Mar 30-Mar 31-Mar 1-Apr 2-Apr 3-Apr 4-Apr 5-Apr 6-Apr 7-Apr Max. Mi n. (μsv/h) 30 μsv/hour 25 20 15 10 55 00 Sendai 90km 0.083 (As of Apr. 7 th ) 14-Mar 15-Mar 16-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 20-Mar 21-Mar 22-Mar 23-Mar 24-Mar 25-Mar 26-Mar 27-Mar 28-Mar 29-Mar 30-Mar 31-Mar 1-Apr 2-Apr 3-Apr 4-Apr 5-Apr 6-Apr 7-Apr (μsv/h) 30 μsv/hour 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 5 5 0 0 Iwaki 43km 13-Mar 14-Mar 15-Mar 16-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 20-Mar 21-Mar 22-Mar 23-Mar 24-Mar 25-Mar 26-Mar 27-Mar 28-Mar 29-Mar 30-Mar 31-Mar 1-Apr 2-Apr 3-Apr 4-Apr 5-Apr 6-Apr 7-Apr Max. Min. Fukushima Dai-ichi MEXT, Fukushima Prefectural Government 24 5

Atmospheric Readings in Tokyo, Osaka and Sapporo (μsv/h) 0.40 μsv/hour 0.3 0.30 0.2 0.20 Tokyo 230km Max. μsv/hour (μsv/h) 0.40 0.30 0.3 0.20 0.2 Sapporo 630km Max. 0.1 0.10 0.0 0.00 Min. 0.1 0.10 0.0 0.00 Min. 14-Mar 15-Mar 16-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 20-Mar 21-Mar 22-Mar 23-Mar 24-Mar 25-Mar 26-Mar 27-Mar 28-Mar 29-Mar 30-Mar 31-Mar 1-Apr 2-Apr 3-Apr 4-Apr 5-Apr 6-Apr 7-Apr 14-Mar 15-Mar 16-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 20-Mar 21-Mar 22-Mar 23-Mar 24-Mar 25-Mar 26-Mar 27-Mar 28-Mar 29-Mar 30-Mar 31-Mar 1-Apr 2-Apr 3-Apr 4-Apr (μsv/h) 0.40 μsv/hour 0.30 0.3 0.20 0.2 Osaka 580km Max. Green box indicates normal range of radioactivity 0.10 0.1 0.0 0.00 Min. Fukushima Dai-ichi 14-Mar 15-Mar 16-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 20-Mar 21-Mar 22-Mar 23-Mar 24-Mar 25-Mar 26-Mar 27-Mar 28-Mar 29-Mar 30-Mar 31-Mar 1-Apr 2-Apr 3-Apr 4-Apr MEXT 25 Fukushima 4. Ensure the Safety ~Food and Products~ Japan inspects radioactivity in food every day, and restricts distribution of food that fails to meet provisional regulation values taking into consideration the spread of contamination. Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station Ibaraki Instructions (as of 9 May 2011) Not to Distribute *Fukushima Prefecture - Raw milk - Non-head type leafy vegetables (e.g. spinach) - Head type leafy vegetables (e.g. cabbage) - Flowerhead brassicas (e.g. broccoli, cauliflower) - Turnip - Log grown shiitake (grown outdoor) - Bamboo shoot - Ostrich fern - Juvenile(baby) fish of Japanese sand lance *Ibaraki Prefecture - Spinach Source: Ministry of Health, Labourand Welfare Not to Consume *Fukushima Prefecture Non-head type leafy vegetables and head type leafy vegetables / Flowerhead brassicas 26 6

4. Ensure the Safety ~Farm Produce~ Fukushima Prefecture About 45Km Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS Samekawa Village Radioactive Contamination in Leafy Vegetables Guidance Levels for Radionuclides in Samekawa-village (Fukushima Prefecture) in Vegetables Samekawa-village (bq/kg) 21-Mar 24-Mar Japan EU IAEA * radioactive 5,900 1,200 2,000 2,000 3,000 iodine radioactive 1,700 68 500 1,250 1,000 cesium (Cs134) Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, EURATOM, IAEA *OIL(Operational Intervention Levels) 6 : Locally produced food, milk and water have been screened, and all members of the public, including infants, children and pregnant women can safely drink the milk and water and eat the food during the emergency phase. 27 4. Ensure the Safety ~Marine Food~ (As of April 24 th ) Over provisional regulation limits : 12 samples Below provisional regulation limits : 227 samples All 12 samples over provisional regulation values : Juvenile (baby) fish of Japanese sand lance, which inhabits in very surface water influenced by radionuclides Fisheries of this fish species : not conducted in Fukushima prefecture and Ibaraki prefecture No fisheries : conducted in Fukushima prefecture 28 7

Safety of Industrial Products Japanese manufacturing industries spare no effort to ensure the safety of their products. Inspection institutions and industry associations provide testing service of the radiation levels of export products. Example of Inspection Institutions - NKKK (Nippon Kaiji Kentei Kyokai) (International Inspectation & Surveying Organization) - SK (Shin Nihon Kentei Kyokai) - ANCC (All Nippon Checkers Corporation) etc. Reference : JETRO Homepage http://www.jetro.go.jp/world/shinsai/20110318_11.html JAMA (Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association) Comments on Radiation Testing Related to the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Situation (April 18, 2011) <extracts> The tests implemented by JAMA -which are conducted directly on various designated areas of the surface of vehiclesare showing results that fall within the range designated by the Nuclear Safety Commission of Japan as being unthreatening to human health, based on the daily readings performed by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in every prefecture since March25. Reference : JAMA Homepage: http://www.jama-english.jp/release/comment/2011/110418.html 29 8

Emergency Dose Limit Workers Exposed to Radiation in Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS, as of April 24 msv JAPAN level of exposure number of workers emergency dose limit 4. Ensure the Safety ~On-site Workers~ The Japanese Government closely supervises on-site workers health conditions, limiting the level of their maximum exposure to radiation to 250mSv. No workers in Fukushima NPS have been exposed to 250mSv or more. 100 250 (limit raised for Fukushima emergency workers) Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency ICRP s limit : 500mSv *ICRP = International Commission on Radiological Protection more than 100mSv 30 more than 250mSv 0 Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency *On March 24, three workers exposed to more than 100mSv were hospitalized, but were released three days later after no health problems were found. 31 Radiation Daily Life Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) 32 1

INES Rating on the Events in Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS The Rating of the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES) on Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station (NPS), in temporary assessed as Level 7. Chernobyl [5.2 million TBq] 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Major Accident Serious Accident Accident with Wide Consequences Accident with Local Consequences Serious Incident Incident Anomaly No Safety Significance Fukushima Dai-ichi [0.37~0.63 million TBq] Three Miles Island *Level 7 : more than several tens of thousands TBq 131 I *Level 6 : thousands to tens of thousands TBq 131 I *Level 5 : hundreds to thousands TBq 131 I 33 C. Impact on Japanese Economy 1. Estimated Economic Damage and Plan for Reconstruction 2. Impact on Energy Supply/Demand in Japan 3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activeties) 34 2

1. Estimated Economic Damage and Plan for Reconstruction Damaged Stocks in Disaster Areas *estimated by the Cabinet Office of Japan 16~25 trillion Yen (US$195~305 billion) (Reference) Japan s GDP : 500 trillion Yen (US$5.9 trillion) Plan for Recovery and Reconstruction *from the speech of Prime Minister Kan on Apr. 1 and Apr. 12 Short-term: clearing debris, erecting temporary housing, rehabilitating industrial facilities Mid and long-term: creating disaster-resilient local community, eco-friendly social system, and welfare-oriented society Reconstruction Planning Council established Compiling supplementary budgets and enacting/amending relevant laws 35 2. Impact on Energy Supply/Demand in Japan Tokyo Electric Power Company supplies electricity to an area with 42 million people and 40% of Japan s GDP, but lost 40% of its generation capacity after the earthquake and tsunami. We are making the utmost efforts to match supply and demand during the peak-load summer on both the demand and supply side. 60 (GW) 50 52GW (Mar.11) Earthquake (Mar.11) 54 GW (Jul. 31) Peak Demand of the Month in 2010 40 30 20 33GW (Mar.17) 31GW (Mar.14) 29GW (Mar.14) 34GW (Mar.31) 33GW (Apr.15) Peak Demand of the Month in 2011 Supply Capacity of TEPCO in 2011 - before March :actual value - after April : estimated value (by METI on May 13 th ) 10 Supply Capacity of TEPCO 0 Feb. Mar. Apr. May Jun. Jul. Aug. Sep. 36 3

3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activities) The Tohoku Expressway is a transport and commercial artery which connects Tohoku and Kanto regions. Numerous factories are located along the route. 347 km out of 675 km of the expressway was destroyed in the earthquake on March 11, but traffic restriction was lifted on March 24 th, following the completion of emergency restoration measures. Tohok u Expressway Mar 12th NEXCO East Mar 17th NEXCO East Mar 12th NEXCO East Mar 21th NEXCO East 37 3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activities) None of the 26 trains operating at the time of the earthquake derailed, nor was there any serious damage to elevated bridges and stations, or collapse of tunnels. The entire Tohoku Shinkansen have resumed operation by April 29 th. Scheduled resumption of operations as of April 18th Morioka to Shin Aomori Resumed operation April 13th Sendai to Ichinoseki Resumed operation April 29th Ichinoseki to Morioka Resumed operation April 23th Fukushima to Sendai Resumed operation April 25th Nasushiobara to Fukushima Resumed operation April 12th JR East 38 4

3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activities) Quays of all major ports in the quake-hit pacific coast from Aomori to Ibaraki became useable by May 24 th.the ports damaged by the tsunami are gradually recovering function. Hachinohe Kuji Miyako Kamaishi Ofunato Ishinomaki Sendai-Shiogama Quays of all the major ports became useable on March 24 th Soma Onahama 39 3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activities) The reconstruction of Sendai Airport which was badly damaged by the tsunami showed surprisingly rapid progress thanks to the cooperation between the US Armed Forces and Japanese Self-Defense Forces. The entire runway was restored and became useable by March 28 th. Passenger flights from Haneda-Sendai and Osaka(Itami)-Miyagi resumed operation on April 13 th, a month after the earthquake. KYODO NEWS KYODO NEWS Sendai airport damaged by the tsunami as of March 13 th. The first landing at Sendai airport since the earthquake on April 13 th. 40 5

3. Reconstruction and Recovery (infrastructure and industrial activities) More than 60% of affected bases of respondents have already finished restoration. Meanwhile, other production bases are on the way to resumption, and about less than 30% are expected to be restored by summer. (Reference) The ratio of the number of establishments located in the municipalities in 7 prefectures (Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima, Tochigi, and Chiba) covered by the Disaster Relief Act in the total number of the manufacturing establishments all over the country, is about 7%. (The figure was calculated based on Census of Manufactures 2008, as of March 27th) Present status and prospects of production bases in the affected areas 64% 67% 58% Whole manufacturing(70) Processing Industry(24) Material Industry(46) 38% 26% 9% 17% 11% 9% 20% 13% 4% 7% 2% 4% 3% 4% 9% 3% 4% 7% 4% Finished restoration 1 month later 3 months later 4-6 months later More than a year Affected areas : Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Chiba 41 D. Responsiveness to the World 1. Cooperation with International Organizations 2. Speedy Dissemination of Accurate Information 42 6

1. Cooperation with International Organizations International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) The March 19 Joint Statement Confirmed - No Restrictions on Travel to Japan - International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) International Maritime Organization (IMO) World Meteorological Organization (WMO) World Health Organization (WHO) International flight and maritime operations can continue normally into and out of Japan s major airports and sea ports, excluding those damaged by the tsunami. Screening for radiation of international passengers from Japan is not considered necessary at this time. Currently available information indicates that increased levels have been detected at some airports, but these do not represent any health risk. Joint Statement from above Five Organizations http://www2.icao.int/en/newsroom/lists/news/attachments/37/pio.05.11.en.pdf 43 Cooperation with the IAEA 1. Information Sharing (1) Japan has been providing facility-related and other relevant information to the IAEA. (2) Nuclear Industry Safety Agency (NISA) provided updates on situations of the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station at the IAEA Technical Briefing (21 st March) and at the side event of the Fifth Review Meeting of the Contract Parties to the Convention on Nuclear Safety (4 th April). 2. IAEA Expert Missions (1) The IAEA has extended to Japan upon the request of the Government of Japan, in connection with the incidents involving the nuclear power plants in Japan by dispatching a series of the IAEA experts to Japan mainly in the field of radiation monitoring. Such dispatch of experts includes : (a) Radiation Monitoring Teams, totaling up to 16 members who have been taking measurements mainly in Fukushima since 19 March; (b) one marine expert from the IAEA s laboratory in Monaco, who boarded Research Vessel MIRAI during 2-4 April to observe and provide advice for Japanese experts on their method of collection and analysis of seawater samples; and (c) A Joint FAO/IAEA Food Safety Assessment Team, who met with local government officials, farmers etc. in Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi and Gunma prefecture. (2) In addition, IAEA experts in BWR technology met with Japanese officials and operators including NISA and the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) and visited the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant on 6 April. 44 7

2. Speedy Dissemination of Accurate Information Japan is committed to the speedy dissemination of accurate information. All necessary information can be found at the following websites. Japan s Countermeasures 1.http://www.kantei.go.jp/foreign/incident/index.html 2.http://www.meti.go.jp/english/index.html 3.http://www.nisa.meti.go.jp/english/ Measurement of Radioactivity Level 1.http://www.mext.go.jp/english/radioactivity_level/detail/1303962.htm 2.http://www.nisa.meti.go.jp/english/ 3.http://www.worldvillage.org/fia/kinkyu_english.php 4. http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/index-e.html 5. http://www.nsc.go.jp/nscenglish/geje/index.htm Drinking Water Safety 1.http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/index.html 2.http://www.waterworks.metro.tokyo.jp/press/shinsai22/press110324-02-1e.pdf Food Safety 1.http://www.maff.go.jp/e/index.html 2.http://www.mhlw.go.jp/english/topics/2011eq/index.html Ports and Airports Safety 1.http://www.mlit.go.jp/page/kanbo01_hy_001428.html 2.http://www.mlit.go.jp/koku/flyjapan_en/index.html 3.http://www.mlit.go.jp/page/kanbo01_hy_001411.html Tourism 1. http://www.mlit.go.jp/kankocho/en/index.html 45 The people of Japan deeply appreciate the sympathy and assistance pouring in from people all over the world. http://www.meti.go.jp/english/earthquake/nuclear/ japan-challenges/index.html 8