
NOV 27, 2023
NEWS
TOP
ANALYSIS
OFF-GRID RENEWABLES ON ISLANDS TO CUT RELIANCE ON DIESEL GENERATORS
While most of Japan’s population lives on five large islands there are another 300 smaller isles in need of power. Some rely on an undersea power cable to connect with the national grid. Other islands rely on stand-alone diesel generators as they’re too small to support a thermal power plant. This situation is an opportunity to experiment and deploy more renewables. But far from being an isolated and local affair this trend has support on the national level.
HYDROGEN TECH BECOMES A FASHION TRENDSETTER
Concern about the environmental impact of the world’s No. 3 polluting industry has set off a whirlpool of creative thinking among Japanese fashion companies. As we enter the Recycling 2.0 era, in which an old textile can be reborn not only as a new textile, business opportunities abound for those willing to seek creative solutions for second-hand resources. Biotechworks-H2 is a startup that turns textile waste into feedstock for making hydrogen. Founded in Tokyo in July, the company has launched three domestic hydrogen production projects.
GLOBAL VIEW
A wrap of top energy news from around the world.
EVENTS SCHEDULE
A selection of events to keep an eye on in 2023.
PUBLISHER
K. K. Yuri Group
Editorial Team
Yuriy Humber (Editor-in-Chief)
John Varoli (Senior Editor, Americas)
Mayumi Watanabe (Japan)
Wilfried Goossens (Events, global)
Kyoko Fukuda (Japan)
Magdalena Osumi (Japan)
Filippo Pedretti (Japan)
Tim Young (Japan)
Regular Contributors
Chisaki Watanabe (Japan)
Takehiro Masutomo (Japan)
Events
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OFTEN-USED ACRONYMS
METI | The Ministry of Economy, | mmbtu | Million British Thermal Units | |
MoE | Ministry of Environment | mb/d | Million barrels per day | |
ANRE | Agency for Natural Resources and Energy | mtoe | Million Tons of Oil Equivalent | |
NEDO | New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization | kWh | Kilowatt hours (electricity generation volume) | |
TEPCO | Tokyo Electric Power Company | FIT | Feed-in Tariff | |
KEPCO | Kansai Electric Power Company | FIP | Feed-in Premium | |
EPCO | Electric Power Company | SAF | Sustainable Aviation Fuel | |
JCC | Japan Crude Cocktail | NPP | Nuclear power plant | |
JKM | Japan Korea Market, the Platt’s LNG benchmark | JOGMEC | Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security | |
CCUS | Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage | |||
OCCTO | Organization for Cross-regional Coordination of Transmission Operators | |||
NRA | Nuclear Regulation Authority | |||
GX | Green Transformation |

Miyagi becomes Japan’s first region to introduce tax on renewables
(Japan NRG, Nov 20)
TAKEAWAY: A movement to introduce taxes is gaining momentum in Japan with dozens of municipalities believed to be working on tax schemes that would affect a portion of solar and wind projects. Local authorities see this both as a way to regulate the location of new projects and get a buy-in from nearby communities, while also raising extra tax income. But the trend is causing concern among developers, especially those with investment overseas, who argue the taxation could put some at a financial or regulatory disadvantage. There are also questions over how the new taxation will affect the cost of renewables in Japan, which is already above the level of similar markets. Still, in practical terms it is unlikely that the national govt will allow the taxation trend to spiral out of control as that would jeopardize Japan’s 2030 goals for reducing emissions. The Miyagi development should be seen in the context of the national govt allowing local authorities a greater share of control (and thus buy-in) into the renewables sector development.
ANRE to subsidize devices that help more renewables volumes travel across regions
(Denki Shimbun, Nov 21)
METI to push scale-up of perovskite solar cell (PSC), with eye to counter China
(Japan NRG, Nov 24)
TAKEAWAY: EneCoat plans to mass produce PSC modules in 2024 and Sekisui plans PSC commercialization in 2025. This timeline means business and requires major cost reductions. At the same time, companies need to address challenges, such as raising power efficiency and endurance. Japan NRG expects alliance building among companies with the key technologies in and outside the PSC domain. METI’s financial backing will likely spur more business ties.
Major PSC demos
Companies involved | Project overview |
JERA, Sekisui Chemical | Thermal power plant, eyeing PSC solar power supplies |
NTT Data, Sekisui Chemical | PSC-equipped data centers |
Tokyo metropolitan govt, Sekisui Chemical | PSC-equipped water recycling systems |
Tokyu Group, Toshiba Energy Systems | PSC-equipped railway station (JR West installation in 2025) |
JR West, Sekisui Chemical | |
Toyota Motor, EneCoat | PSC-equipped cars |
Toyoda Gosei, EneCoat | PSC-equipped cars |
Notas, Peccell Technologies | Farms (to power fences and camera systems, starting spring 2024) |
TEPCO Holdings, Sekisui Chemical | PSC-equipped buildings (building construction completed in 2028) |
Mitsui Fudosan Residential, EneCoat | PSC-equipped condominium (start 2024) |
Panasonic | PSC-equipped homes |
Macnica, Peccell Technologies | Ports |
JGC, EneCoat | Logistic facilities (start 2024) |
Aisin | PSC-powered manufacturing plant (start 2025) |
Yokohama City, Toshiba Energy Systems | Temporary installation in an exhibition hall |
Macnica, Tokyo metropolitan govt, EneCoat | PSC-powered air quality monitoring system |
Toshiba to delist in late December, seen as vital to national security
(Company statement, Nov 22)
TAKEAWAY: Delisting came after many years of shareholder discord that followed scandals around accounting and other issues. In the end, Japanese buyout fund JIP led a group of more than 20 domestic companies to take Toshiba private. The fact that the buyer is an all-Japanese consortium appeases those that worry about Toshiba’s sensitive technologies being sold overseas. It also suggests that Toshiba may now work in concert with some of the companies that invested in it. One of those investors is Chubu Electric.
JAPEX, JGC, K Line and Malaysia’s Petronas CCS ink agreement
(Company statement, Nov 20)
TAKEAWAY: The parties will make a final investment decision in the mid-2020s. This could become Japan’s first commercial CCS project in SE Asia if it launches as planned in 2028.
IHI and Vopak ink MoU on ammonia terminals
(Company statement, Nov 21)
TAKEAWAY: Potential ammonia demand centers in Japan are Hekinan (Aichi Pref), Osaka, Shunan (Yamaguchi) and Hitachinaka-Kashima (Ibaraki). To save on costs, municipalities eye the reuse of legacy facilities such as LPG tanks; cost efficiency is key to win in the terminals business.
Tokyo Gas, Santos Ventures ink MoU on e-methane study in Australia
(Company statement, Nov 21)
TAKEAWAY: As shown in the table, Tokyo Gas lags behind Osaka Gas in the e-methane collaboration with Santos. Tokyo Gas has another goal with Santos Ventures to obtain data for writing future multinational carbon accounting rules.
Comparison of gas utilities’ agreement with Santos
| Partner | Agreement type | 2030 goal |
Tokyo Gas | Santos Ventures | MoU | 60,000 tons / year of supply |
Osaka Gas | Santos | Contract | 60,000 tons / year of supply |
KEPCO, Panasonic, etc to cooperate on hydrogen in Hyogo Pref
(Company statement, Nov 21)
Yamanashi Pref and JERA partner on hydrogen value chain
(Company statement, Nov 22)
TAKEAWAY: Yamanashi is presently the only supplier of green hydrogen that can supply on a spot basis. The other potential partners for JERA might be Obayashi Corp, which produces green hydrogen in Oita Pref, and Resonac, which produces fuel ammonia from plastic waste.
Hitachi Energy unveils new hydrogen-powered generator
(Company statement, Nov 22)
U.S. and Japan to increase support for decarbonization in emerging countries
(Asia Nikkei, Nov 18)
Japan to join U.S.-Singapore aviation green lane framework
(Government statement, Nov 20)
Hitachi and Britain’s FirstGroup partner on electric bus batteries
(Company statement, Nov 17)

New power companies face multiple challenges amid decline in power prices
(Denki Shimbun, Nov 24)
TAKEAWAY: Japan’s electricity market is still at a relatively early stage of maturity, with contracts for electricity futures available for less than four years. Since the 2021 price spike, METI has pushed market participants to strengthen their risk management and use tools such as futures to hedge their exposure. The ministry has, however, made an extra effort to monitor energy markets to avoid volatility. That government oversight is perhaps one of the reasons for complacency among some market participants, which believe that METI would put stability above market competition in times of crisis. This may eventually lead officials to add risk management to the regulatory framework rather than merely advising companies to introduce related functions to their operations. After all, Japan’s industry and public are much more sensitive to changes in electricity prices than gasoline or other transport fuels.
August electricity trading report: New power company share at 17.5%
(Government statement, Nov 15)
OCCTO guidelines for capacity market to allow for “multiple bids” from one site”
(Denki Shimbun, Nov 21)
Japan ranks 4th in global geothermal patents, 8th in offshore wind
(Japan NRG, Nov 22)
Geothermal

Offshore wind

Source: Sagentia Innovation
MHI and Indonesia extend agreement for ammonia-fired power generation
(Company statement, Nov 17)
Renova starts operation at its Sendai biomass power plant
(Company statement, Nov 20)
TAKEAWAY: The company leases the plant site from Sendai City, which has strict rules on solar panel installation. But this biomass plant shows that despite Japan’s reluctance to make new investments in renewables, municipalities are warming up to projects with big potential under the national govt’s improved management plans such as the one set for Miyagi.
NRA to approve change in safety regulations at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa NPP
(Nikkei, Nov 21)
TAKEAWAY: It’s too early to say if TEPCO’s only operable NPP is now moving towards a restart, but this is one of the first notable positive news the utility has received in a long time. This augurs well for TEPCO to cautiously proceed with restart plans for 2024.
Delays in forest cleaning for Chugoku Electric’s spent nuclear fuel storage facility
(Nikkei, Nov 20)
TAKEAWAY: As the spent nuclear fuel storage capacity for Chugoku Electric and KEPCO’s NPPs reaches its limits, building an interim storage facility is very important. However, it’s still not clear when and where such a facility will be built, and delays don’t help. Without such a facility, they’ll have to enlarge on-site storage facilities at the NPPs, most likely facing further opposition from local communities. Also, the lack of appropriate spent nuclear fuel storage hinders the govt’s plan of a fully closed nuclear fuel cycle.
KEPCO to drastically scale back wind power plan in Hokkaido
(Company statement, Nov 21)
Sojitz and EMI launch rooftop solar project in Indonesia
(Company statement, Nov 20)
Osaka Gas acquires 40% of Sonnedix-operated solar plant
(Company statement, Nov 15)
Panasonic seeks to be fully powered by renewables at UK subsidiary
(Company statement, Nov 14)
Mitsui to sell all of its shares in Australia’s IPAH
(Company statement, Nov 22)
NTT group company to build 47 MW solar farm
(Japan NRG, Nov 22)
TEPCO completes third release of Fukushima treated water
(Japan NRG, Nov 20)

Japan pushes LNG importers to secure long-term contracts
(Bloomberg, Nov 21)
TAKEAWAY: The anticipated 30% decrease in LNG procurements by 2030 is in large part due to Japan’s plans to restart its dormant fleet of nuclear reactors, and to a lesser extent due to efforts to cut energy consumption through public conservation campaigns. Nevertheless, Japanese firms have still signed a few new long-term deals over the last 18 months, such as the 20-year agreements with Oman signed by trading houses Mitsui and Itochu, and by JERA. Mitsui is also considering taking a stake in the North Field expansion project in Qatar as a way to ensure stable supply of LNG. In recent months, interest in the LNG sector inside Japan’s government has increased with those backing greater usage pointing out that it is also a way to cut coal volumes. The problem from the Japanese buyer’s perspective is that there remains a great deal of uncertainty about domestic demand for gas 10-20 years from now, largely due to the decarbonization trend. So, if the govt is encouraging buyers to commit to long-term contracts, it’s likely also offering some guarantees in that regard.
METI approves JERA’s strategic buffer LNG stockpiling plan
(Government statement, Nov 24)
Ruling parties, NDP to discuss gasoline tax cuts
(Government statement, Nov 24)
TAKEAWAY: This may be the beginning of an exit from the two-year long energy subsidies. The previous plan was to terminate the subsidies in September this year.
LNG stocks up 3.3% to 2.49 million tons
(Government data, Nov 22)
BY CHISAKI WATANABE
Off-Grid Renewables on Islands to Cut Reliance on Diesel Generators
Shifting a country’s entire energy system to renewables is challenging, but experiments in smaller, isolated grid areas could pave the way to understanding how to achieve a higher adoption of green electricity in Japan.
While Japan comprises more than 14,000 islands, most of the population lives on five large islands – the mainland (Honshu), Hokkaido, Shikoku, Kyushu, and the main Okinawa isle. But there are another 300 smaller isles that require power to sustain their residents.
Some of these small islands, called rito (離島; “remote island”), rely on an undersea power cable to connect with the grid. Others rely on standalone diesel generators as they are too small to support a regular-sized thermal power plant.
This situation is being turned into an opportunity by local authorities and power companies to experiment and install new energy systems to deploy more renewables. But far from being an isolated and local affair this trend is receiving support on the national level.
Policy update
In April, Japan updated the Remote Islands Development Act to add deployment of renewable energy on remote islands to key roles these islands play. The act, which covers 256 rito, bypassing only those in the Okinawa, Ogasawara and Amami areas, stipulates that the central and local governments will provide support to effectively and efficiently develop renewable energy systems on rito.
The regulatory change is supported by an informational campaign. The MoE has released a handbook for developers and local officials on how to improve energy self-sufficiency rates for renewables on remote islands, as well as best-practices ideas.
Switching an island from fossil fuels to renewables carries a number of advantages, only some of which are environmental. As well as reducing emissions, replacing diesel generators with solar panels, for example, avoids blackout risk that comes with typhoons and tsunami blocking new fuel deliveries; lowers labor demands for facility maintenance; cuts operational costs.
In short, according to MoE, a renewables system on a remote island improves its resilience to natural disasters, as well possibly boosting the local economy.
The know-how gained from clean power systems on rito could then be elevated to a regional level, supporting a broader decarbonization push in Japan, the MoE posits in the handbook.
There’s a little-known benefit for those living on the bigger islands of Japan, too. Current rules stipulate that energy costs for residents on remote isles should be comparable to users elsewhere. This “universal service for remote islands”, was introduced in April 2016, and spreads the costs to generate power on remote islands on the shoulders of all ratepayers.
This leaves the rest of the country subsidizing the expense of ferrying diesel and other petroleum fuels to remote locations and back. It is hoped that more solar and wind would significantly reduce the bills to generate electricity on remote islets.
Case study 1: Kagoshima
Kagoshima Prefecture in southwest Japan has 26 remote islands with a combined population of 160,000. Much of the local electricity is generated from burning heavy oil.
The prefecture released a report in March that identified several models for smaller islands to use renewables as a main source of electricity. The report was based on a study of power supply and demand, and the cost and technology challenges faced by four islands (Kuchinoshima, Nakanoshima, Takeshima, and Ukejima), and the potential for green systems.
The report picked a suitable model for each island taking into account variables and conditions such as the age of their main power facilities, undersea cable connection to bigger islands, and the ways the island wants to use renewable energy. The main local industries are agriculture, cattle raising, and fishing.
Table 1 is the conclusion from the report for each of the four islands.
Chart 1
Source: Kagoshima Prefecture
Table 1
Island | Population | Recommended models and projects |
1 Kuchinoshima | 99 | RENEWABLE ENERGY SELF-CONSUMPTION / SMART INDUSTRY MODEL
|
2 Nakanoshima | 142 | UTILIZATION OF STABLE RENEWABLE POWER SUPPLY MODEL
|
3 Takeshima | 58 | MICRO-SIZE ISLAND MODEL
|
4 Ukejima | 90 | MICRO-GRID STRUCTURE BUILDING MODEL
|
Source: Kagoshima Prefecture
Case study 2: Okinawa
In Okinawa, Okinawa Electric supplies electricity to 38 inhabited islands in the region. Because of its geography, the area is not connected to the transmission lines of other EPCOs. Ten of the remote islands in the region are not even connected to the main island of Okinawa.
As a result, the small islets rely on oil-fired generators, which makes them susceptible to hikes in the price of crude and also delivery fees. Okinawa Electric actually takes a loss in order to supply these remote islands with electricity, but according to a company document in May renewables have contributed to reducing the use of fossil fuels on some islands.
Miyakojima
Population: about 50,000
Location: about 287 km southwest of the main island of Okinawa
Miyakojima Mirai Energy Company (MMEC) offers a service to install residential solar panels and batteries for free, with options to add EV chargers and “Eco Cute” heat pump water heaters. Users pay for solar power from their rooftops, which is cheaper than electricity from Okinawa Electric. In case of blackouts, the storage battery provides electricity. MMEC sells excess power to Okinawa Electric.
Tesla supplies its Powerwall storage batteries for the project and more than 300 units have been installed on the island, according to Tesla. A total of 600 Powerwall units are expected to be installed by the end of 2023. That will contribute to achieving the island’s target to have 49% of its electricity supplied by renewables by 2050, according to the company.
The island is also looking to use green hydrogen. In a pilot project supported by the NEDO, Okinawa Electric, Nextems, and the Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry (CRIEPI) will study the potential for hydrogen derived from renewables. The group also plans to put together an action plan for local consumption of hydrogen.
Haterumajima
Population: 454
Location: Japan’s southernmost inhabited island, about 460 km southwest of Okinawa.
Two wind turbines that can be tilted to prepare for approaching typhoons were installed in 2009, the first such turbines to be set up in Japan. A “tiltable” turbine has two blades, instead of the typical three, and the tower is supported by four wires.
The installation came after many turbines were knocked down by typhoons, leading to costly repairs due to the expense of transporting and leasing heavy machinery.
Okinawa Electric decided to try a turbine made by French company Vergnet which can be tilted nearly 90 degrees before a typhoon arrives. The utility won approval from Vergnet to make the turbine towers in Japan to adjust specifications to Japanese requirements. Eventually, two 38-meter turbines with 245kW of capacity each started operating in December 2009. Five more were installed on three other Okinawa islands.
So far, no further damage to the turbines has been recorded. The units provide about 20% of electricity on Haterumajima, and 10% on Minami Daitojima. Five tiltable turbines have also been supplied to the island nation of Tonga in an official development assistant program by the Japan International Cooperation Agency.
In 2016, Okinawa Electric began testing the feasibility of maximizing the use of wind energy on Haterumajima in a pilot hosted by the Okinawa prefectural government. Aside from the two tiltable turbines (245 kW each), the island already had a 1,500 kWh lead-acid battery, and a diesel generator (1,250 kW). A 300 kW set of a motor and generator was added to the system so it can be switched on when electricity from wind turbines exceeds demand.
Diesel generators can only reduce their output to 50% of capacity, while motor-generator sets are not bound by the same rule, which means that motor-generators can reduce their output to better match wind generation with actual demand. Excess wind power can also be stored in the battery, which can then be used to start the motor-generator set. After some trial and error, the island was able to run on 100% wind power for 10 straight days from late November to early December, 2020.
Seeing a larger business opportunity in these projects, Okinawa Electric in April 2021 founded a company called SeED Okinawa to expand its renewable and grid business abroad. Okinawa wants to build on its expertise in expanding renewables and stabilizing the grid with storage batteries on remote islands and provide services to small islands outside Japan.
Challenges remain despite all the innovations and progress that have been made. Projects often rely on subsidies. There is no one single model that fits all of these islands. Even so, pushing ahead with the decarbonization of electricity supply by adding more clean energy and storage devices on small islands offers many benefits including reduced CO2 emissions from diesel generators and a backup power source to prepare for disasters and blackouts.
BY MAYUMI WATANABE
Hydrogen Tech Becomes a Fashion Trendsetter
A new rule in France that requires producers of waste-generating consumer products to disclose data on recyclability is having a ripple effect in Japan. The rule was introduced only this year, but it has already accelerated the fashion industry’s efforts to reduce its CO2 footprint and even helped give birth to one of Japan’s hottest startups.
Japan’s textile exports are strongly dependent on European high fashion brands as clients. And while the domestic textile industry has always looked at ways to improve efficiency and engaged in some recycling, concern about the environmental impact of the world’s No. 3 polluting industry has set off a whirlpool of creative thinking among Japanese fashion companies.
The change has been a boon for Biotechworks-H2, a startup that turns textile waste into a feedstock for making hydrogen. Founded in Tokyo only in July, the company has launched three domestic hydrogen production projects and is preparing another in Malaysia next year, claiming that it will supply “green” H2.
Concern over how to transform industrial waste into new products of value isn’t limited to Japan’s fashion industry. Waste-recycling initiatives are starting to pop up in the agri, food, and even steel sectors. They are driven both by regulatory pressure and advances in material reprocessing. As we enter the Recycling 2.0 era, in which an old textile can be reborn not only as a new textile, business opportunities are arising for those willing to seek creative “second-life” solutions for second-hand resources.
Producing hydrogen from fashion pollution
‘Damaged’ jeans are a standard line in casual clothing, with some designers taking this concept further, deliberately making a $10,000 coat look mangled and used. In the West, the roots of damaging clothes, especially jeans, stems back to young people expressing anger against social norms and institutions, but over the years the look has become a mainstream fashion trend.
In Japan, some consumers have mistakenly assumed that the ‘damaged’ look was about supporting sustainability in fashion. But actual efforts to collect old, unused clothing for recycling have been few and far between.
Tokyo startup Biotechworks-H2 decided to seize this opportunity. Its business model is collecting waste from customers, the apparel manufacturers and retailers, and providing them with CO2 reduction certificates. Then, it can use the collected items as feedstock to make green hydrogen.
The Ministry of Environment estimates that each year Japan’s population throws away 800,000 tons of clothing, of which only 300,000 tons are reused or recycled, and 500,000 tons incinerated.
What Biotechworks-H2 does is cut the used textile into 10 x 10 centimeter pieces and treat them with plasma technology to decompose the material into hydrogen, CO2 and other gases. Compared to heating textile (which is how most of it is recycled today), the CO2 release is 82% lower, said the founder Nishikawa Akihide.
The company could then sell CO2 as dry ice, such as to carbonated drinks manufacturers, and offer hydrogen to power suppliers. The company also offers licensing of its textile treatment plant.
One of the startup’s facilities costs ¥3-5 billion for a 2,000 square meter site, excluding pre-waste treatment and hydrogen purification equipment. The 2,000 square meters site is large enough for a 100 tons/ day waste processing capacity.
In California, Biotechworks-H2 has a pilot plant of 30 tons/ day; five kilos of city waste generates 0.45 kg of hydrogen; polyester textiles 6% hydrogen, cotton textiles 8% of the weight of the material,” Nishikawa said.
Polyester textiles account for the largest share of textile waste, around 60%. In theory, they’d potentially generate 16,000 tons/ year of hydrogen if converted into gasses rather than disposed of at incinerators. The table below shows the breakdown of textile waste by destination.
Textile waste destination
Total amount of clothes thrown away 712,000 tons / year | 15% recycled into textiles and other chemical products | |
19% resold at flea markets, recycle shops and reused | ||
66% thrown away | 25,000 tons reused | |
445,000 tons incinerated and buried | ||
Source: Ministry of Environment
In 2025-26, the company plans to bring online textile-waste-to-hydrogen plants in three municipalities in Japan and one in Malaysia. The latter may start ahead of the Japanese sites, depending on regulatory approval. Nishikawa said his long-term goal is to build a plant in every municipality, which would allow places without solar power to source their own green hydrogen.
In October, Opa, the apparel arm of the major retailer Aeon, inked a partnership with Biotechsworks-H2. Starting 2025, Opa will collect used clothing at its outlets, and will use the hydrogen to power its facilities. To date, 33 companies in Japan, China and Southeast Asia have expressed intention to collaborate with Biotechsworks-H2.
New sustainable fashion materials
Some Japanese textile makers are looking at switching to materials that can be recycled without the need to resort to chemicals.
Partly, this innovation is driven by demand for new materials from companies that want to redesign their employee uniforms to reflect their sustainability philosophy, said an official from Tokyo-based Wansie Uniform. The company’s clients, which include apparel firms, jewelry retailers, services providers and manufacturers, have diverse goals ranging from reducing carbon footprint, raising recycling rates, and reducing waste to zero.
“They want materials that are completely biodegradable, last long but look good enough to raise the corporate image,” he said, adding that manufacturers in particular tend to rigorously measure the carbon footprint of the uniforms.
Producing textiles from steel emissions
A completely different approach to recycling textiles would be to make the original material with waste from other industries, such as plastic bottles or even industrial emissions.
Aichi-based Moririn Corporation, founded in 1903 and perhaps the oldest among waste recycling firms, decided to develop a new synthetic textile made from ethylene glycol (EG) which comprises carbon monoxide, CO2 and hydrogen. The company calls the process “Coupcle”. It generates 0.08 kg of EG from emissions released from 1 kg of steel production. Carbon footprint of the recycled EG is 55% less than virgin EG, the company said.
To source the gases necessary to produce the new material, Moririn decided to approach a major Tokyo-based steelmaker, thinking that it would prove to be a mutually beneficial collaboration. Moririn asked for space in the steelworks to collect exhaust gases from one of the blast furnaces.
Unexpectedly, the steelmaker refused and even got angry, a Moririn official said.
“We were literally told, get out of here. We are not a dirty enterprise. We are one of the cleanest steelmakers in the world and we’ve worked very hard to get here,” the official told Japan NRG.
Later, Moririn was able to find a partner in China.
Regulatory pressure pushes sustainable fashion
Thanks to the EU’s push for greener fashion, Japanese apparel makers have started replacing the lining of fabrics with sustainable textiles. Experimentation with treating old textiles with chemicals is proliferating, though still at an early stage as producers look to create the materials that fashion brands might want to actually use.
Equally, Recycling 2.0 can only take off if there are commercial avenues to recoup the investments. Biotechworks-H2 has latched onto the recent boom in hydrogen to build its business, but others may need to explore other products. Among those that may be promising are ammonia made from plastic and food wastes, and bioethanol made from cotton waste.
In any case, the Japanese fashion industry has to act. “The European clients of Japanese apparel products may make business decisions based on carbon footprints,” METI has warned the industry. Consumer demand for ‘green’ products and regulatory pressure will likely bring more variety in recycled products to the fore.
This winter Tokyo’s fashion trends are glitter and vivid colors to celebrate rejuvenation from COVID. The style is still street-driven and anything oversized or undersized is “in”. Perhaps wearing a “vegan” leather coat and accessorizing with waste-derived sequins will help consumers feel real support for sustainability.
BY JOHN VAROLI
This new weekly column will replace Global View and will focus on energy events in Asia and those that directly impact markets in the region.
China / Bioenergy
China has the highest bioenergy capacity globally at 19 GW, accounting for 27% of the total. Next is Brazil with 13.3 GW; the U.S. with 7.8 GW; the UK with 4.3 GW; Indonesia with 3.9 GW; and Japan with 2.8 GW. China also has 7.6 GW of prospective capacity which is 39% of global projects announced or in construction.
China / Energy projects
Some 72 out of the 481 power projects under the Belt & Road Initiative have been canceled or put on hold due to China’s halt of building coal projects abroad, reports Wood Mackenzie. Of those on hold, over 60% were in Asia, and 32% in Africa. These included 33 GW of coal.
Coal
The World Coal Association has rebranded into a new organization, FutureCoal. This is part of an effort to modernize the coal industry. “The total contribution of coal and the growing global population should not be dismissed. Coal… will be needed in any energy transition,” said Michelle Manook, CEO of FutureCoal.
India / Coal
In contrast to the G7, India has asked private firms to invest in new coal-fired power plants to meet rising electricity demand. Coal now accounts for 36% of India’s total installed capacity.
Indonesia / Energy transition
The country’s energy transition plan is ready, with an outline of the $20 billion investment for the Just Energy Transition Partnership that’s backed by the G7. However, the plan faces criticism that it doesn’t address the spread of off-grid coal-fired power plants.
Indonesia / Geothermal
The market cap of Barito Renewables Energy soared sixfold since going public a month ago, to 840 trillion rupiah making it the second-most valuable company on the IDX exchange. Barito operates three geothermal power plants on Java through subsidiary Star Energy Geothermal, with a total power generation capacity of 890 MW.
Malaysia / Solar
JLand Group and Cenergi SEA Berhad, a subsidiary of UEM, inked a partnership to invest $29 million to develop rooftop solar and energy efficiency to power Johor industrial parks.
Pakistan / Grid
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) approved $250 million in loans for ADB’s Power Transmission Strengthening Project to support the power grid and increase transmission volume. The goal is a high-voltage transmission of 500 kV and 200 kV, and upgrade transmission lines to reduce power losses.
Philippines / Nuclear power
The U.S. and the Philippines inked a deal that will allow the export of nuclear technology and material to Manila. “We see nuclear energy becoming a part of the Philippines’ energy mix by 2032”, said President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.
UAE
Abu Dhabi Future Energy (Masdar), with Abu Dhabi National Energy and EDF Renewables, launched the largest single-site solar power plant ever, with a 2 GW capacity. The Al Dhafra project will cancel over 2.4 million tons of CO2 annually.
A selection of domestic and international events we believe will have an impact on Japanese energy
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NEWS
・Miyagi becomes Japan’s first region to introduce tax on renewables
・ANRE to subsidize devices that help more renewables volumes travel across regions
・METI to push scale-up of perovskite solar cell (PSC) projects, with eye to counter China