| Harvesting Wind is Goal in Japan Looking to the 
    Sea, a Network of Offshore Wind Farms is Planned to Tap Pacific Gales   Jan 22 - International Herald Tribune
 Overlooking a mountain lake a few hours drive from Tokyo, dozens of tall 
    wind turbines spin in the breeze creating carbon-free power for one of the 
    world's biggest emitters of greenhouse gases.
 
 A sudden change in breeze spins the turbines in a different direction, an 
    apt symbol of Japan's efforts to shift away from fossil fuels for renewable 
    energy like wind power to help cut its greenhouse gas emissions under the 
    Kyoto Protocol.
 
 Wind farms like the Nunobiki Plateau Wind Farm on a hill north of Tokyo, 
    which generates enough electricity to power some 35,000 homes a year, have 
    failed to make a dent in Japan's obligations to cut carbon gas emissions 
    under the Kyoto Protocol.
 
 But Japan is now looking towards the sea, following in the footsteps of 
    Europe which is the world's leader in wind energy, by planning a network of 
    offshore wind farms to tap into the gales of the Pacific Ocean.
 
 "It's worthwhile entering the sector now as offshore technology is at the 
    cutting-edge," said Mitsutoshi Yamashita, a Ministry of Economy, Trade and 
    Industry official in charge of promoting wind power. "Once we obtain the 
    technology needed, the kilowatts are limitless."
 
 Japan hopes that wind power will provide around 0.2 percent of the country's 
    primary energy supply by March 2011. That figure might rise sharply if major 
    electric companies follow through with plans to build offshore wind farms 
    near coastal power stations.
 
 The northern Japanese city of Hokkaido, which is the first offshore 
    wind-for-power system outside of Europe, has since 2003 been harnessing the 
    sea breeze with two 600-kilowatt turbines located inside a breakwater less 
    than one kilometer off the coast. That is enough to power an average of 
    1,000 homes per year.
 
 "Maintenance is tough," said Shinya Ono, a town official, explaining the 
    waves were sometimes too high to reach the turbines by boat.
 
 He said that offshore wind energy was double in power to that harnessed on 
    land, but the power it generated was unpredictable when compared with 
    conventional thermal electricity generation.
 
 Nevertheless, sea breezes are seen as more reliable than solar power and 
    wind turbines require less space and lower investment than nuclear and solar 
    plants.
 
 "There's a good wind year and a bad wind year, and when added up so far, it 
    just breaks even," Ono said, adding the central government had subsidized 
    construction costs, including turbines that the town purchased from Vestas 
    of Denmark.
 
 In Europe it costs about 50 to 100 percent more to build offshore wind farms 
    to those based on land. In Japan, it could cost even more since the island 
    nation is surrounded by deeper seas.
 
 Japan is set to study the feasibility of offshore wind energy this year. One 
    option might be to follow the example of Scotland, which installed offshore 
    turbines in deep waters in 2006.
 
 As part of the study, the government is expected to install an offshore wind 
    turbine to determine best engineering practices for the widespread use of 
    the technology. The domestic industry is expected to make a push towards 
    offshore wind turbines by 2012.
 
 Toru Nakao, an engineering consultant at E&E Solutions, a unit of a Japanese 
    nonferrous smelter, Dowa Holdings, envisages that Japan might exploit 
    locations several miles off its coastline in the not too distant future.
 
 "It's challenging for us to catch up," he said.
 
 Japan, among the world's three largest consumers of oil, is facing 
    increasing pressure to raise its supply of energy from non- polluting 
    sources and reduce its dependence on oil, coal and natural gas, almost all 
    of which are imported from abroad.
 
 Its greenhouse gas emissions in the year to March, 2007 were still 13 
    percent above the average level it must meet each year over the next five 
    years under Kyoto. Japan's per capital emissions are among the lowest in the 
    developed world, making it all the more difficult to make further cuts.
 
 Fossil fuels produce two-thirds of Japan's electricity needs with other 
    sources like nuclear and hydropower making up most of the difference. 
    Renewable energy sources contribution to Japan's electricity needs are 
    almost negligible.
 
 By law, electric power companies must more than double their use of 
    renewable energy sources - wind, solar, small-sized hydro plants, 
    terrestrial heat and biomass - to 1.35 percent of Japan's total electricity 
    supply by March 2011.
 
 The 1.35 percent target is modest when compared with a 3.3 percent share for 
    wind power in Europe already. Some analysts say this target may need to rise 
    if Japan is to meet its Kyoto goals.
 
 Another option would be to increase nuclear power, which already generates a 
    quarter of Japan's needs. However a string of safety scandals has eroded 
    public confidence in nuclear power and construction of new plants would take 
    many years.
 
 Helped by government subsidies since the late 1990s, there are more than 
    1,300 land-based wind turbines in Japan run by regional governments and 
    companies like Eurus Energy Holdings, Electric Power Development and Japan 
    Wind Development.
 
 Their wind farms are mainly scattered across rugged areas in the far north 
    or south of the island chain, far from major users.
 
 Adding to the challenges of harnessing wind power are summer typhoons, 
    violent lightning in winter, and a country split between two power systems 
    and regional power grids.
 
 Yet despite the difficulties, Yoshinori Ueda, a strategic planning manager 
    at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries' power systems headquarters, said wind power 
    would have to play an increasing part in Japanese power production.
 
 Mitsubishi, Japan's No. 1 wind power turbine maker, is trying to catch up 
    with European rivals with plans to develop sea-based wind turbines in waters 
    near existing power plants, Ueda said.
 
 Separately, Tokyo Electric Power, the biggest electric power company in 
    Japan, is together with the University of Tokyo looking into the possibility 
    of a large-scale floating wind farm.
 
 To adhere to government regulations, Tokyo Electric buys electricity from 
    wind farms.
 
 But some analysts say big power companies may soon initiate their own wind 
    farms at offshore locations near major industrial ports, where a grid 
    network with existing power plants is available.
 
 "Wind is a gift. It's free of charge. So people tend to assume it's an easy 
    business," said Teruyoshi Kimura, 59, former engineer who owns an inn at the 
    foot of Mount Neko.
 
 Originally published by Reuters.
 
 (c) 2008 International Herald Tribune. Provided by 
    ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.
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