>A government-commissioned panel of experts on Wednesday largely supported Japan’s new energy policy for the next few years that calls for bolstering renewables up to half of electricity needs by 2040 while maximizing the use of nuclear power as the country seeks to accommodate the growing power demand in the era of AI while meeting [decarbonization targets.](https://apnews.com/article/japan-asia-climate-summit-a2c8ea9ba29b0bbf98eea7b4e6b78f53)
>The Industry Ministry presented the draft plan for final review by the panel of 16 mostly pro-nuclear members from business, academia and civil groups. It calls for maximizing the use of nuclear energy, reversing a phaseout policy adopted after the meltdown [crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi](https://apnews.com/article/japan-fukushima-quake-tsunami-anniversary-0089f053d670c78dafd9578c242e1fb3) power plant in 2011 that led to extensive displacement of residents and lingering anti-nuclear sentiment.
>The plan is due to receive Cabinet approval by March after a period of consultation and will then replace the current energy policy, which dates from 2021. The new proposal says nuclear energy should account for 20% of Japan’s energy supply in 2040, up from just 8.5% last year, while expanding renewables to 40-50% from 22.9% and reducing coal-fired power to 30-40% from nearly 70% last year.
jadrad on
“Maximize nuclear power”
Misleading headline given the article says they will increase nuclear power from 8% to 20% of total electricity production, while increasing renewables from 20% to 40-50% of total electricity production.
More accurate headline would be – Japan trying to dramatically reduce coal power by major renewables investment coupled with bringing some of its retired nuclear plants back online.
DeoInvicto on
How is Japan’s electricity demands growing when its population is shrinking by hundreds of thousands of people each year?
potatosword on
They can fix their ageing population problem at the same time!
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From the article
>A government-commissioned panel of experts on Wednesday largely supported Japan’s new energy policy for the next few years that calls for bolstering renewables up to half of electricity needs by 2040 while maximizing the use of nuclear power as the country seeks to accommodate the growing power demand in the era of AI while meeting [decarbonization targets.](https://apnews.com/article/japan-asia-climate-summit-a2c8ea9ba29b0bbf98eea7b4e6b78f53)
>The Industry Ministry presented the draft plan for final review by the panel of 16 mostly pro-nuclear members from business, academia and civil groups. It calls for maximizing the use of nuclear energy, reversing a phaseout policy adopted after the meltdown [crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi](https://apnews.com/article/japan-fukushima-quake-tsunami-anniversary-0089f053d670c78dafd9578c242e1fb3) power plant in 2011 that led to extensive displacement of residents and lingering anti-nuclear sentiment.
>The plan is due to receive Cabinet approval by March after a period of consultation and will then replace the current energy policy, which dates from 2021. The new proposal says nuclear energy should account for 20% of Japan’s energy supply in 2040, up from just 8.5% last year, while expanding renewables to 40-50% from 22.9% and reducing coal-fired power to 30-40% from nearly 70% last year.
“Maximize nuclear power”
Misleading headline given the article says they will increase nuclear power from 8% to 20% of total electricity production, while increasing renewables from 20% to 40-50% of total electricity production.
More accurate headline would be – Japan trying to dramatically reduce coal power by major renewables investment coupled with bringing some of its retired nuclear plants back online.
How is Japan’s electricity demands growing when its population is shrinking by hundreds of thousands of people each year?
They can fix their ageing population problem at the same time!