Japan to subsidize wind power
Tokyo, Jun 16, 2005 -- BBC Monitoring
The Agency of Natural Resources and Energy plans to subsidize installation of
electric accumulators by operators of wind power generators from fiscal 2006 to
boost the supply of wind energy, agency officials said Wednesday [15 June].
The agency hopes the subsidization will help achieve the government's goal of
securing 3,000 megawatts of electricity from wind power generators in fiscal
2010, the officials said. The agency has come up with the plan to partially
subsidize the installation to stabilize the supply of wind energy because
electric power companies are reluctant to buy such energy, saying its supply is
unstable, the officials said. The subsidization is necessary because the cost of
producing wind energy will grow by 50 per cent if electric accumulators are
used, they said. The subsidies will be applicable to wind power generation
facilities to be newly built in areas covered by the Hokkaido, Tohoku, Shikoku
and Kyushu electric power companies, they said. Large-capacity electric
accumulators save electricity produced during the night at wind power generation
facilities, which will then be supplied to electric power companies during the
day. According to the agency's estimate, an additional 900 or so megawatts of
electricity, equivalent to that produced by a nuclear power reactor, will be
produced a year by wind power generation facilities if additional measures, such
as the installation of electric accumulators, are taken. Wind power generators
were providing 940 MW of energy a year as of April this year, and those to be
built are expected to produce an additional 1,000 MW. Even if the goal of
securing 3,000 MW of wind power is achieved, it will account for less than 1 per
cent of total electricity supply. The amount compares with 16,000 MW of wind
energy currently supplied in Germany.
Source: Kyodo News Service, Tokyo, in English 0216 gmt 16 Jun 05
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