New Straits Times

Japan considers phasing out old coal-fired power plants

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TOKYO: Japan vowed yesterday to study concrete ways of phasing out old, more carbon-emitting coal-fired power stations by 2030, following reports it plans to mothball around 100 ageing plants.

The world’s third-largest economy has come under fire for continuing to build coal-fired plants at home, as well as financing projects to build them abroad, notably in Southeast Asia.

Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama said he had ordered officials to make proposals to “phase out inefficien­t coal-fired power plants and make renewable energy a main power source”.

The options could include tightening regulation­s to ensure the ageing plants are phased out by 2030, he added.

Kajiyama declined to give any numerical targets but local media have reported the government plans to phase out 100 out of 114 plants built before the mid-1990s that emit more carbon-dioxide than newer models.

In total, Japan has 140 coalfired power plants, providing nearly one-third of the nation’s total electricit­y generation.

Coal is the second-biggest power-generation method behind liquefied natural gas-fired plants, which provide 38 percent of the nation’s needs.

There are also more than a dozen projects to build coal-fired power plants underway in Japan.

Japan’s basic energy plan aims to have 22 to 24 per cent of the country’s energy needs met by renewable sources, including wind and solar, by 2030, a figure critics describe as unambitiou­s based on current levels of around 17 per cent.

Tokyo has been struggling to cut carbon emissions after shutting down its nuclear reactors following the 2011 meltdowns in Fukushima sparked by a devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami.

Kajiyama said officials were “in the final stages of discussion­s” over stricter rules on exporting coal-fired power generation.

Japanese megabanks had been major financiers of such projects but had changed direction, said Yukari Takamura, an energy expert with the University of Tokyo’s Institute for Future Initiative­s.

They needed “a clear policy guideline” to follow, she told

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