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Cobwebs

August 25, 2021

Japan, you are one of the most technologically advanced countries in the world. Surely, you can come up with a better way of wiring your nation than this.

Cobwebs2.4.jpg

A comment by “Jeffery” from my other blog:

“I hate overhead power and communication lines. They are used too much in the U.S., though many counties and municipalities have begun to require that they be buried during new construction. Europeans look at it like we're India.

”Last job in Japan was in residential housing. I remember seeing RE fliers for projects I was familiar with and all the photos had the power lines Photoshopped out. So, even the Japanese admit that they are unsightly to say the least.

”One Japanese excuse I've heard is that it's done because of typhoons and earthquakes, which are actually the very reasons you bury them - less likely to have them disturbed during these than if they are on a pole that comes down disconnecting several square blocks in the process. Another whopper is about high water table, which is nonsense since most much of the new construction in Tokyo is on "reclaimed" land and they manage to bury it all there.

”But, hey, public officials in tornado and hurricane country in the U.S. are just as deluded not insisting that they be buried so that they aren't torn to pieces every other year or so.”

In Environment, Japanese Architecture, Life in Japan Tags overhead power lines, Electrical Wires, Burying Power Cables, Infrastructure
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Repowering Japan

December 8, 2020

This was originally written in March, 2012, a year after the Fukushima earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster.

 

It’s starting to sound like I do nothing but sit in front of the boob tube, but there was another one of Ikegami Akira’s television specials on Saturday night that is worth mentioning. Part of FujiTV’s series Ano Hi o, Wasurenai: Higashi Nihon Daishinsai kara 1 Nen (I’ll Never Forget That Day: A Year after the Tôhoku Earthquake and Tsunami), Ikegami’s program dealt with both the mechanism of the deadly quake and the energy crisis that has confronted Japan in its wake.

While last year’s tsunami was directly responsible for the shutdown of the Fukushima Dai’ichi nuclear power plant, subsequent, and might I add legitimate, concerns about the safety of nuclear energy have resulted in all but two of Japan’s 54 commercial nuclear reactors being idled[1]. The remaining two are also scheduled to be shut down soon[2], meaning that a country which once depended on nuclear energy to produce 31.4% of its electricity has had to make up the shortfall by importing more natural gas and coal precisely at a time when fresh tensions in the Middle East are driving fuel prices up.[3] Incidentally, 80% of Japan’s oil and 20% of its natural gas passes through the Strait of Hormuz, underscoring how crucial it is that Japan address its energy needs before another oil shock brings the country to her knees.[4]

Fortunately, Japan has options.

By sheer coincidence, I happened to be speaking to an engineer who had just come back from the Kyûshû Electric’s Hatchôbaru geothermal power plant located in central Ōita prefecture near the Asô-Kujû National Park. The largest of 17 geothermal power plants in Japan, Hatchôbaru along with the neighboring Ōdake geothermal power plant produces 122,500kW of electricity, which only amounts to about 1% of Kyûshû Electric’s capacity. The potential for geothermal energy in Japan, however, is great.

I may be oversimplifying this, but wherever volcanoes are found, a power plant can be set up using the steam generated by heat of the volcano’s magma. Japan, with its 119 active volcanoes—the third most numerous in the world—has the potential to produce some 23,470,000 kW of this clean energy. At present, though, Japan ranks 8th in the world in geothermal energy production, producing only 536,000 kW. What’s more Japan has not built a new geothermal power plant in over ten years. Only 0.3% of Japan’s electricity is currently being supplied by these geothermal plants. In spite of that, a surprising 70% of the word’s geothermal power plants are using turbines produced by Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi and Toshiba.

If Japan has the capacity and the technology, what then is preventing the country from taking advantage of this resource?

One, the initial costs can be quite high. Drilling the wells needed for a geothermal power plant costs several million dollars each (I’ve heard as much as five million dollars). And because the wells can only be used for about a year, as many as twenty wells may have to be drilled. The largest geothermal power plant in Iceland has 28 wells.

Two, the hot spring industry is against it. They worry that if the water is diverted for use in the production of electricity there won’t be any left for the spas Japanese love so well.

And, three, most of Japan’s volcanoes are located in National Parks which have strict regulations on development.

In February of this year, however, the Ministry of Environment has signaled that it is willing to consider opening up National Parks for the development of geothermal power. Officials from Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry have also been to Iceland to see how Japan might benefit by taking advantage of this natural resource, which has the potential of producing as much as 20 nuclear reactor’s worth of electricity.

Ikegami’s special also looked into Brazil’s biofuel industry. A similar system has already been adopted in Miyako-jima (Okinawa prefecture), where bi-products from shôchû and sugar production are being used for bio-fuels and the fiber from sugar canes is burned to produce electricity. The aim is to make the island completely energy-self sufficient.

Other towns in Japan have also taken the initiative, including one farming village in the Tōhoku region—the name escapes me right now—which currently produces enough energy from biomass and other sources that it is able to sell its excess electricity back to the power company.

While Japan may not realistically be able to do without nuclear power in the short-term—the demand for electricity, particularly in the summer is still too great—I do think there are things that the country can start doing today to encourage the use and production of alternative energy sources. I’ll address this issue in a day or two. (For more on this, go here.)


 [1] According to a recent poll by Tôkyô Shimbun, 80% of Japanese asked were in favor of phasing out nuclear energy.

[2] By law, nuclear reactors in Japan must be idled every 13 months in order for safety checks to be conducted. Once shut down, however, public pressure has prevented them from being put back online.

[3] Before the earthquake, Japan got 31.4% of its electricity from nuclear power plants, 60.3% from thermal power plants, 8.1% from hydropower, and 0.5% from renewables such as wind and solar. Today, 7.3% of electricity is generated by nuclear power plants, 86.3% by thermal power plants, 6.1% by dams, and 0.6 by renewables. (Note: these figures are for 2011-2012.)

[4] That Japan had the infrastructure in place to compensate for a loss of over 23% of its nuclear power capacity is truly amazing. I don’t think America would be able to make up the loss.

In Environment, Energy Tags Ikegami Akira, Earthquake, Tsunami, Fukushima Nuclear Disaster, Nuclear Power, Geothermal Energy, Iceland
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kawara05.jpg

Progress

November 11, 2020

Above is what Mount Kawara (香春岳) of Tagawa City (田川市) used to look like before Nihon Cement (now Taiheiyō Cement) shaved layer after layer off the top trying to get at its limestone.

When I first visited Tagawa some twenty years ago, the right half of Kawara-dake had already been stripped down to about a third its original height, leaving a sheer cliff of stark white limestone on the left.

Today that has also been mined. Now that's progress!

Kawara-dake.jpg
In Environment Tags Environment, Taiheiyo Cement, Limestone mining, Tagawa City
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Typhoon No. 4

August 6, 2019

This was originally posted in 2013:

Typhoon No. 4 is headed our way. The tropical storm, which is also known as Typhoon Leepi, is expected to reach southern Kyûshû early Friday morning.

Typhoon No. 3 which fizzled out just south of Kansai two weeks ago sparked a lot of discussion. Of interest to many Japanese was not how early the typhoon had arrived—they normally don't hit our shores until late summer—but rather the name of the storm: Typhoon Yagi (goat). 

In Japan where typhoons are usually known by their numbers—something that can be confusing when trying to recall a typhoon of years past—most people were surprised to learn that the storms had names at all.

The second most common reaction was: "Who on earth would name a typhoon after a goat?"

Ever since the year 2000, all tropical storms originating in the northwest pacific or South China Sea have been given names. The names are supplied by the fourteen countries in the region affected by typhoon: Cambodia, China, North Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Micronesia, the Philippines, South Korea, Thailand, the United States, and Vietnam. The meaning of the names come from a variety of sources, from mythological gods and nature to the names of flowers or of boys and girls.

The ten names chosen by Japan in the current list are all constellations. Typhoon No.3 or Typhoon Yagi is actually Typhoon Capricornus (やぎ座, yagi-za). The last typhoon named by Japan was Typhoon Libra (てんびん座, tembin-za).

 As for the name of this latest typhoon, Leepi, it apparently comes from the name of a waterfall in the south of Laos. Typhoon No.5 will be called Bebinca (pudding). You can thank the people of Macau for that one.

For more on typhoons visit the website of the Japan Meteorological Agency. 

. . .

This morning, Kyūshū will be hit by Typhoon No. 8, which is also known as Typhoon Francisco, a name that was supplied by the United States. Typhoon No. 9, which is expected to affect Okinawa and the southeastern coast of China, is called Lekima, the Vietnamese name for egg fruit. We are currently at numbers 42 and 43 of that list of 140 names. A few years back when we were near the end of the list, I thought that a new list of 140 names would be produced. Guess again. They have merely recycled through the list. If I am not mistaken, this is the third time we are going through the list as it takes about six years to use up all the names.

In Environment Tags Typhoon, Typhoon Names
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The-White-Cliffs-of-Iturup.-Russia.front_.jpg

Iturup

September 26, 2018

This is Iturup (also known as Etorofu-tō (択捉島) in Japanese). I used to joke to my Japanese friends, “Why do you want these islands back so badly? Do you want to live there? No? So, what’s the big deal?”

“The natural resources,” they say.

Out of curiosity, I googled Iturup and found these absolutely stunning.

Now imagine if this and other disputed islands in the Kuril chain had remained in Japanese control after WWII. The beach today would surely be covered with tetrapod blocks, the white cliffs enveloped with concrete.

Sakhalin-Iturup_1_1522167657.jpg
3625D57E-4489-454E-A13B-B2D3B9B48C4B_w1023_r1_s.jpg
In Japanese Politics, Environment Tags Iturup, Etorofu-to, 択捉島, Disputed Islands, Kuril Islands, Russia
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