A powerful quake off northeastern Japan last week left up to some 70,000 households without access to water in the region, local authorities said, underlining the urgent need to increase quake-resistant water pipes in the disaster-prone country.

Water disruption in Miyagi Prefecture, which impacted about 37,000 homes, was mostly caused by damage to two key water pipes in the region that were more than 40 years old, according to the prefecture. One of them was not quake-resistant, it said.

File photo shows a resident pumping water supplied by the Self-Defense Forces into bottles in Kurihara, Miyagi Prefecture, on March 18, 2022. (Kyodo)

As of March 2021, 40.7 percent of major water pipes in Japan were considered resistant to massive quakes and the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry aims to raise the proportion to 60 percent by fiscal 2028.

In Miyagi and Fukushima, which were hit hard by the March 16 temblor, the percentage stood at 46.4 percent and 56.3 percent, respectively. Kanagawa, near Tokyo, had the highest percentage at 72.8 percent, while Kochi in western Japan was the lowest at 23.8 percent.

Water pipe construction and maintenance projects are typically financed by water bills residents pay to local governments. "It might lead to a rise in bills if we try to make all our pipes quake-resistant at one stroke," a Miyagi prefectural government official said.

Masakatsu Miyajima, a professor of earthquake engineering at Kanazawa University, pointed to the importance of promoting understanding about increased cost burdens among residents.

"There is a wide gap between regions in the percentage of quake-resistant key water pipes, which is a risk factor for large-scale, long-term water disruption," Miyajima said.

"The profitability (of water business) is more severe in regional areas than in cities as their population has been shrinking more rapidly," he added.


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