World | nuclear power Japan Will Go Nuclear Power-Free (Again) Tomorrow Last reactor will be turned off By Ruth Brown Posted Sep 15, 2013 3:42 PM CDT Copied Reactors No. 3, right, and No. 4 stand at Oi nuclear power plant operated by Kansai Electric Power Co., in Oi town, Fukui prefecture, western Japan. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File) Japan will soon be completely without nuclear power. Again. The country is switching off the last of its 50 nuclear reactors—reactor 4 at Oi in western Japan—for maintenance tomorrow, and it's unclear if or when it will go online again, reports CNN. The country went completely nuclear power-free for the first time in 40 years last year, but the Oi reactors were turned back on again a few months later, reports the BBC. Other power companies around the country have applied to turn back on about 12 other reactors, and PM Shinzo Abe would like to say yes, but the public has been unsurprisingly down on nuclear power since the Fukushima disaster. Japan used to run on about 30% nuclear power, and the average Japanese household's electricity bill has gone up 30% since Fukushima. Read These Next JD Vance can't possibly be happy about how this interview went. This is what happens when you lose control of a plane refueling hose. Mitt Romney's sister-in-law has been found dead. Major news outlets aren't agreeing to Pentagon rules. Report an error