Katsunobu Kato, chief cabinet secretary to Suga, said that around 950,000 households were left without power after two thermal power plants in Fukushima had to be taken offline. Several bullet train lines were also suspended.
The Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco), which looks after the decommissioned Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, said it was checking its monitoring posts in the prefecture to ensure there were no radiation leaks. Shortly after midnight, NHK reported that Tepco had detected "no major abnormalities" at any of the Daiichi reactors where the 2011 nuclear meltdowns occurred. None were also reported at the Daini plant a few miles away in Fukushima, according to the New York Times. But the quake slightly damaged a tank storing irradiated wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plants, according to the company managing the facilities. Located near the site of the reactors that melted down in 2011, the tank is one of 1,000 that hold a million tons of wastewater that is used to cool the melted fuel rods in the failed reactors.Tepco said on Sunday that small amounts of water leaked out of a tank. But it noted that the leaks posed no danger and had already been contained.
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said in a press conference on Sunday that there were no deaths. But more than 100 were injured and people from dozens of homes had to be evacuated, according to the New York Times.
A series of small aftershocks hit Fukushima throughout Sunday, with one registering a magnitude slightly above 5.0, according to the Times.
JMA said there was no danger of a tsunami, but agency official Noriko Kamaya warned residents of aftershocks as strong as magnitude 6.0 in the coming days. She said that Saturday night's earthquake is an aftershock of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake.
Takashi Furumura, a professor at the Earthquake Research Institute at the University of Tokyo, told NHK that an earthquake of this magnitude can be followed within two or three days by another of a similar scale.
Saturday night's quake came less than a month before the 10-year anniversary of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, which took place on March 11. Also called the Great East Japan Earthquake, the magnitude 9.0 rumbler unleashed tsunamis as high as a 12-story building and caused the death of more than 20,000 people.
The tsunami disabled the power supply and cooling systems of three reactors in the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, causing a nuclear meltdown. Though no deaths or cases of radiation sickness were reported, more than 100,000 people were forced to flee their homes and the power plant had to be shut down permanently. The accident is considered the second-worst nuclear meltdown after the Chernobyl disaster in 1986. (Related: Fukushima's radioactive waste reaches North America.)
Less than an hour after Saturday's Japan earthquake, a magnitude 6.0 earthquake struck off the coast of Papua New Guinea around midnight. No injuries or damages were reported and there was no tsunami risk.
Visit Disaster.news to read the latest news about earthquakes and other natural disasters.
Sources include: StrangeSounds.org 1 TheGuardian.com AlJazeera.com NYTimes.com WorldVision.org World-Nuclear.org StrangeSounds.org 2Google Trends reveals horrifying search subjects during massive Texas power outage
By JD Heyes // Share
New research shows polar bears are “fat and healthy” despite modest ice loss in the Arctic
By Divina Ramirez // Share
Texas electric company hit with $1 BILLION class-action lawsuit over high energy bills
By Arsenio Toledo // Share
Keeping it green: 9 Air-purifying houseplants for your living room
By Virgilio Marin // Share
The science of slumber: How sleep became the ultimate anti-aging treatment
By willowt // Share
Trump's move to designate Antifa as a major terrorist organization sparks legal and political debate
By patricklewis // Share
The invisible poison: How pesticides in the sky are turning rain toxic
By avagrace // Share
Study: A very specific dietary strategy can help make glioblastoma more treatable
By patricklewis // Share