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source : www.reuters.com
Sat Apr 2, 2011 12:48pm EDT
Factbox: Japan's disaster in figures
(Reuters) - The following lists the impact of the earthquake and tsunami that rocked the northeast coast of Japan on March 11 and the subsequent crisis at a nuclear power plant.
DEATH TOLL
* A total of 11,938 people were confirmed dead by Japan's National Police Agency as of 1100 GMT on Saturday, while 15,478 were missing.
NUMBER OF PEOPLE EVACUATED
* More than 164,200 people were in shelters around the country as of 1100 GMT on Saturday following evacuation, the National Police Agency said.
The government has set up an evacuation area around a quake-stricken nuclear plant in the northeast with a 20-km (12-mile) radius. More than 70,000 people lived in a largely rural area within the 20 km zone. It is unclear how many of them have been evacuated, but most are believed to have left.
Another 136,000 people were within a zone extending a further 10 km in which residents are recommended to leave or stay indoors.
HOUSEHOLDS WITHOUT ELECTRICITY
* A total of 168,586 households in the north were without electricity as of 0700 GMT on Saturday, Tohuku Electric Power Co said.
HOUSEHOLDS WITHOUT WATER
* At least 220,000 households in eight prefectures were without running water as of early on Saturday, the Health Ministry said.
NUMBER OF BUILDINGS DAMAGED
* 45,761 buildings have been completely destroyed, the National Police Agency of Japan said as of 1100 GMT on Saturday.
IMPACT ON ECONOMY
The government has said it estimated damage from the earthquake and tsunami at 16 trillion to 25 trillion yen ($190 billion-$298 billion). The top estimate would make it the world's costliest natural disaster.
The estimate covers damage to roads, homes, factories and other infrastructure, but excludes lost economic activity from power outages and costs arising from damage to the Fukushima nuclear power plant, as well as the impact of swings in financial markets and business sentiment.
The yen spiked to a record high against the dollar after the quake, prompting the first joint intervention by the Group of Seven rich nations in 11 years to help shield Japan's export-reliant economy.
Japanese shares have shed more than 5 percent since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, and a subsequent nuclear safety crisis, triggered the biggest two-day rout in the market since 1987.
Japan's reconstruction spending will almost certainly exceed that of the 1995 quake in Kobe, when the government needed extra budgets of more than 3 trillion yen.
The government may need to spend more than 10 trillion yen in emergency budgets for post-quake disaster relief and reconstruction, with part of them possibly covered by new taxes, Deputy Finance Minister Mitsuru Sakurai signaled on Thursday.
NUMBER OF COUNTRIES OFFERING AID
According to the Foreign Ministry, 134 countries and 39 international organizations have offered assistance.
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/02/us-japan-quake-factbox-idUSTRE7300HH20110402?pageNumber=2
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source : blogs.reuters.com
By John Foley
The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.
HONG KONG — The owner of Japan’s stricken nuclear reactors should emerge from the wreckage intact. But shareholders in Tokyo Electric Power, whose Fukushima complex was damaged by this month’s earthquake, could lose their entire investment. Tepco has just turned to Japanese banks for 2 trillion yen ($25 billion) in emergency funding which should at least prevent a nuclear crisis turning into a financial crisis. Investors are already pricing in losses, but if further big claims arise — as seems possible — the company’s equity could be wiped out.
Tepco shares have dropped almost 60 percent since the quake, destroying almost 2 trillion yen of value. The losses will come in three kinds. First is the cost of rebuilding, and writing down the value of the worst-hit plant. That may come to 580 billion yen, according to Nomura.
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