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2011年8月27日土曜日

Japanese firm asks staff to get same energy-saving haircut (Digital Trends)

Energy-saving haircutA construction company in Japan has asked its 2700 staff members to get the same haircut – in a bid to conserve energy.

As you’ll no doubt recall, the massive earthquake and tsunami that struck north-western Japan in March had the effect of knocking out the Fukushima nuclear plant. This has resulted in demand on electricity supplies in some parts of the country coming under severe pressure – especially during the hot and humid summer months when millions of people turn on air conditioners.

Adding to the strain on demand is the fact that many other nuclear plants across the nation have been shut down while they undergo safety checks. As a result, the Japanese government has requested that companies and homes do their best to cut down on their use of electricity.

A Daily Telegraph report said it is this drive to save energy that has led the Tokyo-based construction firm, Maeda Corp., to encourage staff members to get identical haircuts.

Explaining the move, Maeda spokesperson Chizuru Inoue said, “Our company is very keen on protecting the environment and we encourage our staff to adopt many environment-friendly actions.”

She continued: “We are not sure of the data yet, but we believe if people have short hair they do not need to use their hair driers for so long and they will use less water. If all our staff do this, then it may save a lot of power.”

Male employees are being encouraged to get a short back-and-sides “but slightly longer on top,” while the female workers should go for a bob “with a longer fringe that can be swept to one side.” A picture of the two recommended haircuts can be seen above.

While some companies have followed the government’s advice and moved production to weekends and evenings in order to lessen the burden on power stations, Maeda could well be the first company to recommend an energy-saving haircut.

[Top image courtesy of Levent Konuk / Shutterstock]

[Bottom image courtesy of Maeda Corporation's blog]


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2011年8月20日土曜日

NRC Staff Directed to Set Priorities for Japan Safety Proposals - Bloomberg

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission directed its staff to choose which task-force safety proposals should be adopted in the near term in response to the Japan crisis, resolving a dispute over how to proceed.

Chairman Gregory Jaczko had pressed the commission to act within 90 days on each of 12 recommendations the task force offered in a July report. Several commissioners led by William Ostendorff urged more time to review the proposals.

“The plan we’ve established will require a dedicated effort by our staff and stakeholders, and will require a continued commitment by the commission to see that these recommendations are promptly addressed,” Jaczko said today in a statement.

The NRC panel was charged with developing safety steps after an earthquake and tsunami in March crippled Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant, the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986. A majority of the five-member commission balked at Jaczko’s plan and Ostendorff said on July 28 he had “significant reservations” about swift action, echoing the positions of Commissioners William Magwood and Kristine Svinicki.

Under the plan today, the NRC staff has until Sept. 9 to outline which recommendations the commission should implement “without unnecessary delay,” according to the statement.

By Oct. 3, NRC officials must “lay out all agency actions to be taken in responding to lessons learned from the Fukushima Dai-Ichi accident,” and set priorities for acting on 11 of the recommendations.

The staff has 18 months to consider the task force’s main recommendation that the NRC’s overall regulatory approach be revised, according to the statement.

The task force also recommended requiring plant owners to have at least eight hours of backup power at reactors, provide emergency systems to spray water into pools holding spent fuel and install more reliable venting for reactors similar to those that failed in Japan in March.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jim Snyder in Washington at jsnyder24@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Larry Liebert at lliebert@bloomberg.net


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