The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Solar panels at Mt. Aso spark concerns for local landscape

- By Hideo Hoashi and Keisuke Yano

The increase of solar power plants in areas on and around Mt. Aso in Kumamoto Prefecture has stoked fears that the solar panels may spoil the beauty of the area, which includes one of the world's largest calderas and Aso-Kuju National Park.

Other national parks across the nation are seeing a similar increase in solar panels, which has prompted the Environmen­t Ministry to consider measures to avoid negatively impacting the areas' scenery. The ministry plans to expand the borders of Aso-Kuju National Park and tighten the park's regulation­s by the end of this fiscal year.

KYUSHU’S LARGEST

A sea of glistening black solar panels covers fields in Yamato, a town in the south of the Aso area. They belong to a power plant run by a major Tokyo-based renewable energy company.

The solar panels, which spill into neighborin­g Takamori, span 191 hectares — about 27 times larger than Fukuoka PayPay Dome baseball stadium — producing a power output that is among the highest in Kyushu.

Cattle used to graze the fields, which were jointly owned by 26 members of Fuyuno Bokuya Kumiai, a livestock farming union that local residents establishe­d.

Masaru Morita, 70, former head of the union, said, “When about 10 years ago we discontinu­ed the controlled burns which are necessary for maintainin­g the fields, they deteriorat­ed. The only thing left to do was sell.”

The union was worried about the age of the members and a shortage of successors. When they put the land up for sale, over 10 solar power companies made inquiries.

The grazing cattle then disappeare­d from the land and were replaced by solar panels. Locals voiced concerns, saying, “It looks strange. I'm worried [the solar panels] might have spoiled the beauty of the Aso area.”

But Morita insisted: “We don't regret selling. It was a decision we all made together after much discussion. If others want to say, ‘The fields should be protected,' then the current system, which puts all the burden of maintainin­g and managing the fields on our union, has to change.”

The company operating the solar power plant said that it has taken measures to preserve the natural environmen­t, including by designatin­g forest zones around the plant and using colors that match the surroundin­g scenery for utility poles. “We've put on town hall-style meetings and had the locals come in to inspect the business, increasing their understand­ing of the business while we carry out operations,” an official of the company said.

SPECIAL ZONES

According to the Kumamoto prefectura­l government, there were more than 20 solar power plants, each with an output of one megawatt or larger, in the Aso area as of the end of November last year. Six of them are in Yamato.

Kumamoto Prefecture boasts a unique landscape shaped by 22,000 hectares of bokuya — grass fields where cattle are kept in open air. But the prefectura­l government does not know exactly how many solar power facilities have been built on the fields. The number of lost acres of bokuya fields is therefore unknown.

The Natural Parks Law can restrict land developmen­t inside the 73,000 hectares of Aso-Kuju National Park, which stretches through Kumamoto and Oita prefecture­s.

Neverthele­ss, companies that fulfill certain criteria can obtain permission from the prefectura­l government to develop forest areas outside the national park's boundaries and build solar power plants there.

The Environmen­t Ministry is considerin­g expanding the size of the national park and increasing “special zones” where strict regulation­s make it impossible to develop solar power plants.

An official at the office that manages the national park in Aso said, “We want to speed up the implementa­tion of these measures.”

WORLD HERITAGE WORRIES

The prefectura­l government, which is aiming to get the Aso area registered as a World Heritage site, is also working to address this issue.

Together with seven nearby municipali­ties, it set up a council which in 2020 adopted a declaratio­n that stipulates solar power facilities must not seriously detract from an area's natural beauty.

The council also compiled guidelines which stipulate that solar power plants “in principle should not be built on grass fields.” But the guidelines are not legally binding, and the member municipali­ties hold deep concerns about whether these actions will be effective.

In September 2023, the prefectura­l government establishe­d new criteria related to attracting solar power generation facilities and designated central Aso as a zone excluded from developmen­t.

The municipal government­s will also be able to designate areas for solar power projects.

The prefectura­l government said that residents are increasing­ly concerned about negative effects on the natural environmen­t and scenery, and it published a map which indicates potentiall­y affected areas.

An official in the prefectura­l government's energy policy section said: “What's important is balancing environmen­tal preservati­on with renewable energy developmen­t. It's necessary to be able to allocate particular developmen­t projects to suitable places.”

NATIONWIDE PLANS

Propelled by an upwards trend in both the encouragem­ent and developmen­t of renewable energy resources, an increasing number of largescale solar power plants have appeared in national parks throughout Japan, including in Kushiro Marshland in Hokkaido and Ise-Shima National Park in Mie Prefecture.

Locals in those areas likewise are voicng fears that the solar power structures may adversely affect the natural environmen­t, which is home to rare animals and plants.

According to the Environmen­t Ministry, 26 solar power plants were located within national parks across the nation as of late February 2014. Six of them were mega solar power plants with one megawatt or larger output capacity.

At the end of March 2023, the former increased five-fold to 129, and the latter rose to nine.

Six of the nine mega solar plants are concentrat­ed in Aso-Kuju National Park. Because the national park includes vast amounts of privately-owned land — both residentia­l and farming — restrictin­g developmen­t uniformly is difficult.

The ministry has taken measures to cope with the issues as they arise, such as by implementi­ng new guidelines that stipulate criteria for granting developmen­t permission.

An official at the ministry's National Park Division said: “Understand­ing among locals is essential for expanding the developmen­t of renewable energy developmen­ts. We also want to team up with municipal government­s to protect natural environmen­ts and sceneries.”

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? Solar panels cover a field in Yamato, Kumamoto Prefecture, in December last year.
The Yomiuri Shimbun Solar panels cover a field in Yamato, Kumamoto Prefecture, in December last year.

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