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    Japan to make renewables top power source by 2040

    TOKYO (AFP) – Japan wants renewable energy to be its top power source by 2040 in a push to reduce dependence on coal and gas and become carbon neutral by mid-century, government plans showed yesterday.

    Thirteen years after the 2011 Fukushima disaster, the plan also foresees a major role for nuclear power in helping to meet growing energy demand from artificial intelligence and microchip factories.

    The world’s fourth-largest economy – which campaigners say has the dirtiest energy mix in the G7 – had already set a goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2050.

    Under the new plans, renewables such as solar and wind were expected to account for 40 to 50 per cent of electricity generation by 2040.

    That marks a jump from last year’s level of 23 per cent and a previous target for 2030 of 38 per cent.

    Resource-poor Japan “will aim to maximise the use of renewable energy as our main source of power”, said the draft Strategic Energy Plan unveiled yesterday.

    Government experts were reviewing the plan released by the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy and it will be presented to the Cabinet for approval.

    A man walks on Nikkawahama beach in front of wind turbines in Kamisu, Ibaraki prefecture, Japan. PHOTO: AFP

    Japan is aiming to avoid relying heavily on one energy source to ensure “both a stable supply of energy and decarbonisation”, the draft said.

    Geopolitical concerns affecting energy lines were also behind the shift to renewables and nuclear, it said.

    Nearly 70 per cent of Japan’s power needs in 2023 were met by power plants burning coal, gas and oil – almost all of which must be imported.

    The government wants that figure to fall to 30 to 40 per cent by 2040. The previously announced 2030 target was 41 per cent, or 42 per cent when hydrogen and ammonia were included.

    The new plans forecast a 10 to 20 per cent jump in overall electricity generation by 2040, from 985 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) in 2023. “Securing decarbonised sources of electricity is an issue directly related to our country’s economic growth,” head of the national energy agency Yoshifumi Murase told the government’s expert panel yesterday.

    Unlike the previous plan released three years ago, the draft no longer foresees reducing Japan’s reliance on nuclear power “as much as possible” – a goal set after the 2011 disaster.

    The government pulled the plug on nuclear power plants nationwide after the tsunami-triggered Fukushima meltdown.

    However, it has gradually been bringing them back online, despite a public backlash in some places, as it seeks to cut emissions.

    It expects all its existing reactors to be in operation by 2024, and affirmed the government’s plan to develop and use new next-generation nuclear reactors, as its existing facilities get older.

    Nuclear accounts for about 20 per cent of Japan’s energy needs under the 2040 targets, around the same as the current 2030 target.

    That would mean more than double the 8.5 per cent of overall power generation that nuclear provided in 2023.

    Japan, like many countries, sweltered through record-breaking summer temperatures this year.

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