Nuclear ‘bribery’ backlash in Japan over restart plan for world’s largest plant

Published: 8:00am, 15 Oct 2025Updated: 8:00am, 15 Oct 2025

Japan’s largest power company is reportedly dangling a 100 billion yen (US$654 million) payout for locals to restart its long-dormant Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant in a move critics have called “bribery”.

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The unprecedented financial support package, originally reported by the Nikkei business newspaper, reflects Tokyo Electric Power Company’s (Tepco) mounting desperation to revive the world’s largest nuclear site more than a decade after the Fukushima disaster, according to analysts.

A sprawling complex spread across the coast of the Sea of Japan in Niigata prefecture, Kashiwazaki-Kariwa has stood idle since 2011, when a magnitude 9 earthquake and tsunami triggered catastrophic meltdowns at Tepco’s Fukushima Daiichi plant.

Although Kashiwazaki-Kariwa was spared in 2011, it had previously sustained damage during an earthquake in 2007, raising questions about its future.

Black smoke billows from the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant following an earthquake in July 2007. Photo: Japan Coast Guard/EPA
Black smoke billows from the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant following an earthquake in July 2007. Photo: Japan Coast Guard/EPA

Previous efforts to restart the facility have stalled amid safety lapses and regulatory breaches, including Tepco’s admission that it left an intruder detection system unrepaired to cut costs.

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