Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is pushing Japan’s coal industry to expand
sales at home and abroad, undermining hopes among environmentalists that he’d
use the Fukushima nuclear accident to switch the nation to renewables.
A new energy plan approved by Japan’s cabinet on April 11
designates coal an important long-term electricity source while falling short
of setting specific targets for cleaner energy from wind, solar and geothermal.
The policy also gives nuclear power the same prominence as coal in Japan’s
energy strategy.
In many ways, utilities are already ahead of policy makers.
With nuclear reactors idled for safety checks, Japan’s 10 power companies
consumed 5.66 million metric tonnes of coal in January, a record for the month
and 12 percent more than a year ago, according to industry figures.
“You cannot exclude coal when you think about the best
energy mix for Japan to keep energy costs stable,” said Naoya Domoto, president
of energy and plant operations at IHI Corp., a developer of a technology known
as A-USC that burns coal to produce a higher temperature steam. “One way to do
that is to use coal efficiently.”
Japan’s appetite for coal mirrors trends in Europe and the US, where
the push for cheaper electricity is undermining rules limiting fossil fuel
emissions and supporting cleaner energy. In the US, a frigid winter boosted
natural gas prices, providing catalyst for utilities to extend the lives of
dirtier coal plants. Germany, Spain and Britain are slashing subsidies for
renewables to rein in the cost of electricity.
Mixed bag
For renewable energy environmental
groups, Japan’s policy is a mixed bag offers little in the way of policy
direction. Instead, it backs the status quo, calling for reactors shut after
the 2011 disaster to be restarted while offering no targets for the amount of
power coming from wind and solar.
“What had been expected of the basic plan was to present a
major policy to switch from nuclear power,” the Japan Renewable Energy
Foundation said in a statement. “But the basic plan shows that the government
has given up to fulfill that role. The plan does not promote a shift from old
energy policies.”
WWF Japan urged the government to set a target to promote
clean energy as soon as possible.
“The energy plan failed to present the spirit of
innovation,” the conservation group said in a statement April 11. “Japan
basically needs to recognize an increase in coal use is a serious issue for climate change. The
country needs to push for reduction of carbon dioxide.”
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