Bangkok Post

‘Typhoon turbine’ generates high hopes

- HARUMI OZAWA

TOKYO: Most people look for a place to hide when a typhoon is on the horizon, but Atsushi Shimizu hopes that the fury of nature may one day help resource-poor Japan tackle its energy woes.

The Tokyo-based engineer believes that his bladeless wind turbine can not only stand up to the raw force of these storms, but also harness that power to generate electricit­y.

Shimizu’s egg-beater shaped creation — it has three cylinders and a central rod — responds to wind coming from any direction and doesn’t use a propeller to spin.

Instead it takes advantage of the Magnus effect, a force that sees air curve when passing by a spinning object, such as a football.

“There are some estimates that wind power has more potential here than solar,” said the 37-year-old, who quit his job at an engineerin­g firm to launch startup Challenerg­y in 2014.

“But we haven’t been able to turn that much of this wind power into actual energy here in Japan.”

Japan turned to expensive and polluting fossil-fuel options when it shut down dozens of nuclear reactors in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima accident.

A quake-sparked tsunami swamped the plant in Fukushima, sparking the worst atomic disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.

Six years later, a wary public is resisting government efforts to switch reactors back on — boosting interest in solar, wind and other renewable energy sources.

The amount of electricit­y produced by wind nearly doubled in 2016 from a year earlier, according to a recent survey by the Japan Wind Power Associatio­n.

Still, the increase — 300 megawatts — can only power tens of thousands of homes in a nation of 127 million.

And wind power’s share of Japan’s total energy mix is still less than 1%.

Shimizu and others are determined to change that.

“After the Fukushima accident, I had to question myself as a Japanese person if it would be justified to continue operating nuclear plants in this country,” he said.

Japan’s wind patterns and hilly terrain are not conducive to using the three-blade wind turbines common in other countries. Furthermor­e, the threat of typhoons can turn these turbines into matchstick­s, unlike Shimizu’s more durable creation.

Last summer, Shimizu and his staff tested a prototype of their turbine with a tiny one kilowatt capacity in southern Okinawa — it survived winds that would usually shut down a three-blade turbine.

But some remain sceptical of the wind turbine’s chances.

Mecaro, another firm in northern Japan, has struggled to commercial­ise its windmill-shaped wind turbines, which also rely on the Magnus effect, said Izumi Ushiyama, a wind energy expert at Japan’s Ashikaga Institute of Technology.

“A wind turbine like Challenerg­y’s could be very durable in strong winds, but without operating it throughout the year we don’t know if it could produce more power than convention­al turbines,” he said.

“This is a very interestin­g challenge. It’s literally a ‘Challenerg­y’,” Ushiyama added, referring to the company’s name.

The little firm hopes to start mass producing a turbine with about 10 times the capacity by 2020.

It’s a far cry from the one million kilowatts of energy that just one of Japan’s nuclear reactors could produce.

Still, Shimizu has high hopes f or his turbine both at home and in other nations which get hammered by windpacked storms.

“If we can invent a wind turbine that suits Japan’s environmen­t, we’ll be able to build them in many other places around the world that have a similar climate,” he said. “That’s our dream.”

 ?? AFP ?? Atsushi Shimizu, founder of Challenerg­y, stands next to his bladeless wind turbine.
AFP Atsushi Shimizu, founder of Challenerg­y, stands next to his bladeless wind turbine.

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