Energy Policy

Fukushima Cleanup Delayed Again: Decades-Long Challenge Exposes Tokyo’s Mismanagement

By Economics Desk | July 29, 2025

Japan’s flagship nuclear cleanup at Fukushima faces another major delay, pushing full-scale removal of deadly melted fuel debris beyond 2037—highlighting the costly consequences of weak oversight and globalist complacency.

More than a decade after the catastrophic tsunami crippled the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, a sobering announcement from Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) delivers yet another setback. The projected start of full-scale removal of hazardous melted fuel debris has been pushed back until at least 2037, prolonging an already sluggish decommissioning process that now threatens to span over a century. Why Does America Care About Fukushima’s Mess? While this crisis unfolds thousands of miles away, the implications for the United States are deeply troubling. The continued instability in Japan’s nuclear management underscores the dangers inherent in surrendering control to...

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