Fukushima operator Tepco admits culpability

Fukushima-tepco
Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) has accepted findings of a parliamentary inquiry into the Fukushima nuclear disaster that found the company guilty of colluding with industry regulators.

The operator of a Japanese nuclear power plant that blew up after a tsunami last year has admitted its lack of a safety culture and bad habits were behind the world’s worst nuclear accident in 25 years, its most forthright admission yet of culpability.

The operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco), said it accepted the findings of a parliamentary inquiry into the Fukushima nuclear disaster that accused the company of “collusion” with industry regulators.

An earthquake on 11 March last year generated a tsunami that smashed into the nuclear plant on Japan’s north-east coast and triggered equipment failures that led to meltdowns and the spewing of large amounts of radiation into the air and sea.

Takefumi Anegawa, the head of Tepco’s company reform taskforce, told a news conference the report by a parliamentary committee contained “so many descriptions about the lack of a safety culture and our bad habits”.

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