Sometimes, people and nations listen. In the horror of Fukushima and that great wave of destruction that moved across the eastern shores of Japan, two great powers are responding appropriately.  Ironically, they lost the last world war.The first announcement came from Japan's Prime Minister:"At a press conference last week, Prime Minister Naoto Kan effectively  scrapped Japan's plan for increasing domestic electricity supply. "Under  the current energy policy, by the year 2030, more than 50% of Japan's  electricity will come from nuclear power generation and 20% from  renewable energy sources," he said. "However, we now have to go back to  the drawing board and conduct a fundamental review of the nation's basic  energy policy." Renewable-energy experts agree that the ongoing nuclear  crisis, while tragic, could be a remarkable opportunity to move away  from the country's focus on nuclear power development and imported  fossil fuels toward solar, wind, biomass, geothermal and other natural  domestic sources. (clip) 
New legislation is expected to help diversify the nation's energy  portfolio. A new feed-in tariff (FIT) will oblige utility companies to  buy all the power generated through renewable sources connected to a  grid at fixed, premium rates. Prices are different depending upon the  type of renewable energy. Japan's first FIT scheme in 2009 created a  market for electricity generated by homeowners that installed  solar-power systems.
The expanded tariff will go into effect on a full  commercial scale in Japan next April, 
and will include solar PV, wind,  biomass, geothermal and small hydropower projects. "With mandated  pricing, regulated by law, anyone that goes into business and produces  power, regardless of how they do it, knows there is a marketplace for  the power," says Giuffre. "There are a lot of people lining up to do  projects."Who knows?They just might find that the evacuated land around Fukushima that will need to be purchased, will be useful for giant solar fields that might power 20% of Japan's total electric load.  If the evacuation zone of 30 by 60 Km is converted to harvesting solar energy, 80,000 MWs of solar could be built. That's 15 times more capacity than the plant (which was one of the 15 largest in the world at 4.7 GW) and four times the energy.In 2008, Japan ranked third in the world in electricity production, after the United States and China, with 1.025×1012 kWh[5] produced during that year.[6] In terms of per capita electricity consumption, the average person in  Japan consumed 8,459 Kilowatt-Hours in 2004 compared to 14,240 for the  average American.The other great power is Germany.
Germany to stop using nuclear power                The Associated Press
                                   BERLIN — Germany is determined to show the world how  abandoning nuclear energy can be done.
                                          The world's fourth-largest  economy stands alone among  leading industrialized nations in its  decision to stop using nuclear  energy because of its inherent risks. It  is betting billions on  expanding the use of renewable energy to meet  power demands instead.
 The transition was supposed to happen  slowly over the next 25 years,  but is now being accelerated in the wake  of Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi  nuclear plant disaster, which Chancellor  Angela Merkel has called a  "catastrophe of apocalyptic dimensions."
 Berlin's  decision to take seven of its 17 reactors offline for three  months for  new safety checks has provided a glimpse into how Germany  might wean  itself from getting nearly a quarter of its power from  atomic energy to  none.
 And experts say Germany's phase-out provides a good map that   countries such as the United States, which use a similar amount of   nuclear power, could follow. The German model would not work, however,   in countries like France, which relies on nuclear energy for more than   70 percent of its power and has no intention of shifting.
 "If we  had the winds of Texas or the sun of California, the task here would be  even easier,"Here in Texas, we do have those winds.And we have our own California sun
but at West Texas prices.And we have the brains.I guess it depends on whichone we use.
 
 
Terrific blog, Oz!! Thank you for keeping this issue alive while it slips under the radar in US media.
ReplyDeleteNuclear disaster, Horizon BP, Massey coal mining deaths - how much death, destruction, environmental catastrophe and costly resource wars does it take before people admit to the cost of extractive fossil fuels...and acknowledge that we have better choices right under - or over our noses?