At Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Station Unit 7, where TEPCO was carrying out safety measures for restarting, TEPCO conducted a comprehensive inspection in response to the fact that some of the work that had been announced to have been completed had not been completed. We did it and found that the construction was not completed in about 70 places.

TEPCO announced that it had completed safety measures for the restart of Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant Unit 7 in January, but after that, some of the work to install the fire detector has not been completed. It turned out that the construction work was not completed, and TEPCO is conducting a comprehensive inspection in response to this.



And so far, it has been found that construction has not been completed in about 70 places.



According to the people concerned, it seems that the cause was that information sharing was not properly done among the multiple departments in charge, and TEPCO decided to hold a press conference on the 10th to explain the details. I will.



At the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant, problems related to counter-terrorism such as unauthorized entry of employees into the central control room and inadequate equipment to detect the intrusion of terrorists became apparent one after another, and TEPCO initially put it into commercial operation this month. We have reviewed the process of Unit 7 for the restart, which was supposed to be, and have not decided yet.