Japan Court Bars Restart of Nuclear Reactor Shut After Fukushima
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High court orders Shikoku Electric to keep Ikata reactor shut
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Shikoku Electric shares tumble most in more than three years

A Japanese court overturned a ruling that allowed a nuclear reactor in the country’s south to operate, frustrating the government’s push to bring online dozens of plants shut in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima disaster.
The decision by Hiroshima High Court reverses a lower ruling that had cleared the way for Shikoku Electric Power Co. to operate its Ikata No. 3 unit, according to an emailed statement Wednesday from the company. Siding with local citizens, the court told the utility to keep the plant off-line. The reactor, which restarted last year under stricter post-Fukushima safety regulations, has been shut for maintenance and scheduled to go back online Jan. 20.
Shikoku Electric fell as much as 11 percent in Tokyo, the biggest intraday decline since May 2013.
The injunction is a blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s goal of having nuclear power account for as much as 22 percent of the nation’s electricity mix by 2030. Public opposition through local courts and municipal governments has emerged as one of the biggest obstacles to that plan. Just four of Japan’s 42 operable nuclear reactors are currently online.
The Hiroshima District Court sided with the utility in March in deciding not to issue a temporary injunction. No high court in Japan has overturned a lower court ruling regarding nuclear restarts since the Fukushima disaster.
The company said in a statement that the ruling was “unacceptable” and it’s seeking its reversal. The injunction is effective through Sept. 30, 2018, according to Nikkei.