Asia

Japan’s biggest fire in 50 years ravages 170 buildings

Japan’s biggest fire in 50 years ravages 170 buildings

TOKYO: A fire ripped through more than 170 buildings and killed one person in a southern Japanese coastal city on Wednesday, with military and firefighting helicopters scrambling to extinguish the country’s largest urban blaze in almost half a century. Aerial footage from broadcasters showed houses reduced to rubble and thick plumes of smoke rising from the hilly Saganoseki district of Oita city, which overlooks a fishing harbour renowned for its premium Seki-brand mackerel.

The flames had also spread to nearby forested slopes and an uninhabited island more than one kilometre off the coast, likely due to strong winds, local media reported. The blaze started on Tuesday evening and has burned 48,900 square metres – roughly the size of seven soccer fields – forcing 175 residents in the district, some 770 km southwest of Tokyo, to flee to an emergency shelter, Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency said. The cause of the fire was under investigation, the agency added.

One person has been found dead, local media reported citing police sources, while a woman in her 50s was reported to be hospitalised for mild burns. “I extend my heartfelt condolences to all residents who are evacuating in the cold,” Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said in a post on X. “The government will provide the maximum possible support in collaboration with local authorities,” she wrote.

The fire has caused power outages at around 300 houses in the district, according to Kyushu Electric Power. The number of buildings and size of the area engulfed in flames make it the largest urban fire in Japan since a 1976 blaze in Sakata, excluding incidents caused by earthquakes. In 2016, a fire in Itoigawa burned 147 buildings and about 40,000 square metres. No one was killed.

Separately, the governor of the Japanese prefecture that is home to the world’s largest nuclear power plant is set to give approval as early as this week for its restart, local media reported on Wednesday. The approval will clear the final hurdle in Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings’ quest to bring the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant back online, more than a decade after the Fukushima nuclear disaster led to its shutdown.

Niigata Prefecture Governor Hideyo Hanazumi is set to announce his approval as early as Friday to partially resume Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, Kyodo news agency said, citing multiple unnamed sources in the prefecture government. Hanazumi will consult the prefectural assembly on his decision during its regular session beginning on December 2. If the assembly endorses his decision, he is expected to respond to the national government’s request to approve the restart, the Nikkei business daily said.

TEPCO is planning to bring online the two biggest units of the plant, No. 6 and No. 7, which can together produce 2,710 megawatts of electricity, and possibly decommission some of the remaining five units. Kashiwazaki-Kariwa’s total capacity is 8,212 MW. In October, TEPCO finished checks at No. 6 reactor after fuel loading, saying at the time it had confirmed that the main systems required for reactor startup were operating properly.

The company has also earlier pledged 100 billion yen to support local communities to gain support for the restart, which TEPCO has sought for many years despite some local opposition. If approved, the restart would be in line with new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s plans to support more nuclear restarts to strengthen energy security. — Reuters

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