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Tepco bailout

November 4, 2011

Japan's government allocates 11.5 billion dollars to help the Tokyo Energy and Power Corporation (Tepco), which is struggling to decontaminate the Daiichi plant and surrounding area and pay compensation to the victims.

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The disaster-struck plant at Fukushima
Tepco is still struggling to keep radioactive leakage under controlImage: picture alliance/dpa

The Japanese government has agreed to bail out Tepco with an initial installment of over 10 billion US dollars (900 billion yen) to help it tide over the nuclear crisis at Fukushima. The energy giant has been reporting major losses amid compensation payments to the victims of the nuclear disaster, cleanup efforts and higher fuel costs.

The bailout is being financed by a fund made up of Japanese nuclear plants, their operators and the government. Tepco has promised to reduce spending and to reduce its workforce by almost 15 percent by dismissing over 7,000 employees by the year 2014 in a bid to cut its costs.

Masataka Shimizu at a press conference in Tokyo
Tepco's Masataka Shimizu stepped down after his company suffered massive lossesImage: dapd

On March 11, Japan was hit by a massive earthquake and an ensuing tsunami. Water flowed into Tepco's Daiichi nuclear power plant, causing the cooling units to shut down. The fuel rods in reactors 1, 2 and 3 melted either partially or completely, leading to an increase in radioactive leakage. The authorities had to evacuate thousands of people living within a perimeter of 20 kilometers around the plant after radioactive contamination was confirmed.

Agencies: dpa, AP / mg
Editor: Sarah Berning