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Originally published Monday, July 30, 2012 at 8:58 PM

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Japan utility gets $12.8B nuclear crisis bailout

The Japanese utility that operates the nuclear power plant sent into meltdown by last year's tsunami received a trillion yen ($12.8 billion) public bailout Tuesday, effectively putting it under government control.

The Associated Press

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TOKYO —

The Japanese utility that operates the nuclear power plant sent into meltdown by last year's tsunami received a trillion yen ($12.8 billion) public bailout Tuesday, effectively putting it under government control.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. apologized for the "inconvenience and anxiety" from the disaster at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant in northeastern Japan, and for raising electricity charges to cover the costs of dealing with the crisis.

The company still faces massive compensation demands from those forced to evacuate and whose land and products were contaminated by spewing radiation following the disaster that began March 11 last year.

TEPCO must also shoulder the enormous costs of decommissioning three reactors at Fukushima Dai-ichi that went into meltdown.

It must also put into safe storage nuclear fuel at a fourth reactor that is sitting in a less protected pool for spent-fuel rods after it was taken out of containment for a routine inspection.

In May, the last of this nation's 50 working reactors got turned off, but two are now back online. Despite protests, the government is eager to restart reactors because of the ballooning cost of fuel imports.

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