Ōkuma, Fukushima

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Ōkuma
大熊町
Town
Ōkuma Town Hall
Ōkuma Town Hall
Flag of Ōkuma
Flag
Official seal of Ōkuma
Seal
Location of Ōkuma in Fukushima Prefecture
Location of Ōkuma in Fukushima Prefecture
Ōkuma is located in Japan
Ōkuma
Ōkuma
 
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Country Japan
Region Tōhoku
Prefecture Fukushima
District Futaba
Area
 • Total 78.70 km2 (30.39 sq mi)
Population (December 2014)
 • Total 10,876[citation needed]
 • Density 138/km2 (360/sq mi)
Time zone Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)
- Tree Momi fir
- Flower Nashi pear
- Bird Black kite
Phone number 0120-26-3844
Address Shimonogami Ōno 634, Ōkuma-machi, Futaba-gun, Fukushima-ken 979-1308
Website Official website

Ōkuma (大熊町 Ōkuma-machi?) is a town located in Futaba District, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. In 2010, the town had a population of 11,515[1] However, the town was totally evacuated in the aftermath of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster and remains effectively a ghost town, although some residents have been permitted return during daylight hours from May 2013. As of December 2014, the town had an official registered population of 10,876[citation needed] and a population density of 138 persons per km². The total area was 78.70 square kilometres (30.39 sq mi).[2]

Geography

Ōkuma is located on the Pacific Ocean coastline of central Fukushima. Ōkuma lies in the center of the Hamadōri region of Fukushima, bordered to the west by the Abukuma Highlands and to the east by the Pacific Ocean. It is set between the cities of Namie and Futaba to the north, Tamura to the west, and Kawauchi and Tomioka to the south. The town is the site of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.

Mt. Higakure (日隠山 Higakure-yama), with a height of 601.5 meters, is within the city. The Kuma River (熊川 Kuma-gawa) also flows within the city.

Surrounding municipalities

History

Early history of the area

The area of present-day Ōkuma was part of Mutsu Province. While historical records are unclear, it is believed that the area of present-day Ōkuma was ruled by the Shineha clan beginning in the mid-12th century. Later, during the Sengoku period, in December 1492 the Sōma clan defeated the Shineha clan, and the area transferred to the Sōma clan's control.[3][4]

During the Edo period, the Kumagawa Post Town (熊川宿 Kumagawa-juku) was established along the Iwaki-Sōma Road (岩城相馬街道), also referred as Coastal Road (浜通り Hamadōri), in the area of present-day Ōkuma. The Iwaki-Sōma Road connected the region to Mito in the south and Sendai in the north. Modern-day National Route 6, which runs through Ōkuma, generally follows the same route as the Iwaki-Sōma Road.[5]

Creation of the municipality

In 1888, the national government passed the Municipal Government Act (市制町村制 Shi-sei Chōson-sei), and in accordance with the act, on 1 April of the following year the villages of Ōno (大野村 Ōno-mura) and Kumamachi (熊町村 Kumamachi-mura) were inaugurated as parts of the district of Shineha (標葉郡 Shineha-gun).

On 1 April 1896, the Shineha district merged with the district of Naraha (楢葉郡 Naraha-gun) to become the present-day district of Futaba. Over a half a century later, on 11 November 1954, the villages of Ōno and Kumamachi merged to form the present-day town of Ōkuma.

From coal mining to nuclear power

Beginning during the 1870s, coal mining became an integral part of the economy of the Hamadōri region. This continued through the beginning stages of Japan's post-World War II rapid economic growth period, leading Fukushima Prefecture to lag behind the country as a whole in industrial and economic development. In the tail end of the 1950s, the prefecture began promoting electricity generation as a way to alleviate the economic problems on the horizon from the impending closure of the coal mines.

On 30 September – 22 October 1961 the town councils of Futaba and Ōkuma, respectively, unanimously voted to invite Tokyo Electric Power Company to build a nuclear power plant on the border of the two towns.[6] In September 1967 construction began on unit one of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. By October 1978, units one through four, which are on the Ōkuma side of the plant, had been commissioned. Units five and six (on the Futaba side) were commissioned by March 1979.[7]

2011 Tōhoku earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster

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On 11 March 2011 the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami occurred. The earthquake and tsunami caused severe damage to Ōkuma, especially devastating coastal areas. The tsunami hit and flooded the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, located on the Pacific coast of Ōkuma, and set off the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster. By the following morning, the Japanese government had ordered residents to evacuate to outside of a 10 km radius of the power plant. Many residents were evacuated to the nearby city of Tamura, among other cities.[8]

Shortly thereafter Ōkuma set up a temporary town office in the Tamura City General Gymnasium (田村市総合体育館 Tamura-shi Sōgō Taiikukan). The temporary town office was later moved on 3 April to Aizuwakamatsu. Ōkuma residents had scattered to about 20 evacuation centers located in the cities of Tamura and Kōriyama and the towns of Miharu and Ono, and by 30 April approximately 1,800 residents had expressed the desire to also move to Aizuwakamatsu.[9]

On 10 December 2012 Ōkuma modified the areas of the town under evacuation orders and permitted residents of select regions of the town to return to their homes. Within the first 19 days 104 residents returned, however other residents of Ōkuma, like some other communities in Fukushima, are "starting to come to terms with a sobering realization: their old homes are probably lost forever, and they must start anew elsewhere."[10]

As of 2015, the town is aiming to develop a forested area for inhabitation by 2018.[11] The seaside area of the town, which was once heavily populated, will be turned into a nature reserve.[12]

Education

Ōkuma formerly had one high school, one middle school and three elementary schools.

Transportation

Railway

(At present, all train services are suspended)[13]

Highway

International relations

References

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  11. 大熊町、2018年度の居住再開めざす 時期の表明は初
  12. 2013 Interim Report
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External links

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