Japan's only two working nuclear reactors can remain online after a court rejected an appeal by residents who said safety rules following the 2011 Fukushima disaster were inadequate, the operator confirmed today.
The court ruling was a victory for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who plans to bring back atomic energy, five years after a series of meltdowns at the Fukushima plant.
The catastrophe led to the closure of all nuclear reactors in the resource-poor country, forcing it to turn to expensive fossil fuels.
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A court spokesman refused to comment.
Residents argued that Kyushu Electric has underestimated the scale of potential earthquakes and volcanic eruptions that could hit the region and claimed government safety standards were inadequate.
They plan to appeal the case in the Supreme Court, Japan's Jiji Press reported.
The Fukushima meltdowns were sparked by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake-generated tsunami on March 11, 2011.
The disaster triggered the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986, bred distrust and fuelled widespread protests.
Yoshihide Suga, the government's top spokesman, told a press conference on Wednesday that new safety standards are "the world's toughest" and the government had no intention of changing its stance on restarting reactors.
But environmental group Greenpeace criticised the decision in a statement, saying the court "failed to order the shutdown" of the operating reactors "despite evidence of severe earthquake and volcano risks at the plant".
Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority, which approved the restarts under the new safety rules, "is failing to apply lessons of Fukushima and protect the people of Japan", Shaun Burnie, Greenpeace senior nuclear specialist, said in the statement.
The latest legal decision comes after a Kyushu district court in April 2015 ruled that the two reactors should be allowed to restart under the post-Fukushima safety regulations.
In August, the No 1 reactor became the first unit to come online under the new standards, followed by the No 2 reactor in October.
The Sendai reactors are the only two operating in the country after a court in March ordered the shutdown of two nuclear reactors in central Japan.