The Nuclear Safety and Security Commission said that seven of nine commissioners voted to restart the Wolsong No. 1 reactor located in Gyeongju city, 275 kilometers (170 miles) south of Seoul.
It was the first such decision in South Korea since safety concerns about nuclear energy and older plants were raised following the meltdowns at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi reactors in 2011. South Korea's 23 nuclear power plants mostly located in the country's southeastern coast provide about one-third of its electricity.
Two commissioners who asked for more time to review the reactor's safety abstained from the vote at the end of the 14-hour meeting that began yesterday and ended past midnight.
South Koreans were sharply divided over the fate of the Wolsong No 1 plant that had operated for 30 years until its license expired in 2012. Residents of Gyeongju and members of environmental groups staged protests near the nuclear watchdog's office when the commissioners discussed the restart in three meetings since January.
"I think there could be a backlash to the nuclear energy industry," Suh said. "It will become increasingly difficult to extend the lifespan of other nuclear plants or to build new ones."
The fate of South Korea's oldest nuclear plant, Kori No. 1, could be reviewed in the next year as the nuclear plant operator must decide by the end of 2015 whether to seek renewal of its operating license. South Korea's government is also seeking to build more nuclear power plants.
Supporters said the safety concerns were overblown and that South Korea, which imports oil and gas, needs the cheap energy source.
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