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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Japan PM seeks ‘carbon neutrality’ by 2050

Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga on Monday set a 2050 deadline for the world’s third-largest economy to become carbon neutral, significantly firming up the country’s climate change commitments.

Delivering his first policy address since taking office, Suga placed the environment front and centre as Japan plays catch-up with climate pledges made by other major economies.

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“We will bring the total amount of greenhouse gas (emitted by Japan) to net-zero by 2050, meaning carbon neutral,” Suga told parliament.

“I declare we will aim to realise a decarbonised society,” he added, to applause from Diet members.

Tokyo had previously only aimed to achieve carbon neutrality sometime in the latter half of the century, a goal that critics called vague.

But the new target was praised by activists and experts and puts Japan on the same timeline as Europe and Britain and a decade ahead of China, which last month set a 2060 goal.

Suga did not give precise details on how Japan, a country still heavily reliant on coal, will meet the deadline but said technology would be essential. 

“The key is innovation,” he said, citing examples including next-generation solar batteries.

He added that Japan would also push the use of renewable energy and nuclear power, stressing that safety would be a priority—a key point in a country that suffered the Fukushima nuclear disaster. 

Japan, which is a signatory to the Paris climate change agreement, was the sixth-biggest contributor to global greenhouse emissions in 2017, according to the International Energy Agency.

It has struggled to cut carbon emissions after shutting down nuclear reactors following the 2011 meltdown in Fukushima sparked by a devastating earthquake and tsunami.

Reliance on fossil fuels like coal increased after the Fukushima disaster as public anger over the accident pushed all of the country’s nuclear reactors offline temporarily.

Japan’s 140 coal-fired power plants provide nearly a third of its total electricity generation, and coal is the second-biggest power-generation method behind LNG-fired plants, which provide 38 percent of the nation’s needs. 

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