The Phnom Penh Post

Japan shows why we all need fracking

- Stephen Stromberg

IN JAPAN, even environmen­talists like fracking.

The anxiety about Donald Trump here is palpable. But during a two-week reporting trip, there was one thing practicall­y everyone I met was relieved to hear: A Trump administra­tion might encourage fracking and natural gas exports to places like Japan.

If people like Kimiko Harata of the Kiko Network, a prominent Japanese environmen­tal organisati­on, had their way, the country would ramp up renewables – but also burn a vast amount of natural gas in its power plants over the next two decades.

“The bridging energy source, I think, is gas,” she said, revealing the sort of thinking US environmen­talists often condemn. Much or all of the fuel would come from outside Japan in the form of liquefied natural gas (LNG).

“Lowering the LNG cost is key,” she said. “We import the gas from various countries, and there is environmen­tal impact. So we want to eliminate that impact.”

Japan is engaged in a national crisis over nuclear power, but the country has embraced natural gas. The US, by contrast, is seeing a roiling national debate over natural gas and fracking, but concerns over nuclear power are muted. Each country is half right.

Gas, though a fossil fuel, produces fewer planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions when burned than coal, the fuel’s direct competitor. It also produces a lot less of other kinds of air pollution. Burning gas instead of coal would be a relatively cheap strategy to reliably produce cleaner electricit­y in a way that easily integrates into the existing electricit­y system, buying some time to develop and deploy carbon-free energy sources.

Another reason Japanese environmen­talists want to burn so much gas is that they also want to quickly eliminate nuclear power. Following the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi accident, the country has mostly kept its large fleet of nuclear power plants closed, though experts reckon some two dozen could safely and reliably produce massive amounts of carbon-free electricit­y in accord with strict new regulatory standards. Something must fill the void.

Renewables will not be able do so for a long time. A mountainou­s, land-poor country, Japan does not have much space for large wind or solar projects. When I asked him about these challenges, Koichi Yamamoto, the Japanese environmen­t minister, played up his country’s investment in hydrogen fuelcell technology. But scaling it up and making it truly carbon-neutral will still take a lot of time and money.

Existing nuclear power plants, by contrast, need to be flipped back on, and they could provide years of emissions-free energy. But environmen­talist and public opposition is pronounced.

The United States is something of a mirror image to Japan on this. The debate over nuclear power smolders on, but public acceptance of the technology is relatively high, and killing the energy source is not a priority for major US environmen­tal groups. That’s good: Nuclear plants provide the United States with about a fifth of its electricit­y, and the country’s emissions profile is much better for it.

But US environmen­talists and many other Americans hate fracking. Though decent regulation­s can handle the most concerning side-effects, several states and localities have banned fracking entirely. Green groups and manufactur­ers who want to keep their fuel prices extra low also strongly oppose natural gas exports – the kind that Harata wants to help move her country off coal.

The divergent debates in the United States and Japan show that people tend to worry about energy projects that feel physically near to them. Or, perhaps, that distance brings perspectiv­e.

Moving to a green economy – that is, to a radically different way of producing and consuming energy – will require more than just the applicatio­n of political will. It will require a big investment in technology and deployment enabling a transition that appears seamless to most people. There are only so many cost-attractive options available to manage this transition.

So countries should keep their options open. Invest in renewable technology, but also embrace natural gas if it helps them get off coal, then transition off gas as renewables become progressiv­ely cheaper.

Keep an open mind on nuclear power, and certainly use existing reactors as long as feasible.

First eliminate coal, by far the dirtiest fossil fuel. Then phase out energy technologi­es that are a lot less dangerous.

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