The Nuclear Regulation Authority announced the plans yesterday in response to an IAEA evaluation of Japan's nuclear safety regulations since the 2011 Fukushima disaster. The report was submitted to the government last week.
The IAEA review, its first since the Japanese nuclear authority's establishment in 2012, was conducted in January to determine whether the country's new regulatory system meets international standards.
The IAEA report said even though Japan has adopted stricter safety requirements for plant operators, inspections are reactive, inflexible and lack free access. The report noted that the nuclear authority has made efforts to increase its transparency and independence.
Current on-site checks have largely become a choreographed routine. Inspectors' requests for access to data and equipment outside of regular quarterly inspections are not mandatory, and there is no penalty for plant operators that fail to meet safety requirements.
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Inspections also tend to be limited to a checklist of minimum requirements.
The IAEA report came as nuclear safety concerns increased among the Japanese public following two powerful deadly earthquakes in southern Japan.
Three reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant suffered meltdowns in March 2011 following a massive earthquake and tsunami.
The authority plans to revise laws next year and enact them in 2020 to implement the IAEA's recommendations, officials said yesterday.
The authority also said it would increase the size and competency of its staff. The IAEA urged Japan to develop training programs and step up safety research and cooperation with organisations inside and outside the country. Japan plans to send five inspectors to the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission later this year for training in nuclear safety inspections.