2022-12-22 08:32

Why Companies Are Eager to Get Involved

Corporate efforts to reduce carbon emissions are increasingly targeting the production process, not only at major corporations, but even at craft breweries.

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https://featured.japan-forward.com/japan2earth/2022/11/1779/


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Susan Yoshimura

A US citizen based in Asia for over 20 years, Susan has a postgraduate degree in Environmental Education. She is a former environmental activist and media relations coordinator at Greenpeace Japan and research programme assistant at United Nations University, Tokyo. She has 15+ years experience in Japanese-to-English translation and editing in the environmental management field.


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00:00
Welcome to the SDGs in the NEWS Podcast.
This is Susan Yoshimura, Managing Editor of Japan 2 Earth, coming to you from Tokyo.
Today, we bring you another English article on Japan and the SDGs.
You can find the full text on our website. Just click the link in the episode notes.
Have a listen.
Why companies are eager to get involved
Corporate efforts to reduce carbon emissions are increasingly targeting the production process,
not only at major corporations, but even at craft breweries.
Companies are accelerating efforts to achieve carbon neutrality at plants and manufacturing bases.
Solar power and other renewable energies tend to get the most attention when discussing carbon neutrality.
But corporate initiatives run the gamut from optimizing manufacturing processes
to simulating decarbonization methods in virtual spaces and utilization of hydrogen.
Even sake breweries are promoting their wares as having been brewed with zero carbon dioxide emissions.
Carbon neutrality has indeed become an indispensable aspect of business strategy.
In October, automobile manufacturer Daihatsu issued a press release on a large-scale improvement at its main plant.
Located in Oyamazaki, Kyoto Prefecture, the plant hadn't undergone a major refurbishment in 50 years.
The plant manufactures subcompact cars such as the Thor and Boone models, as well as parent company Toyota's ProBox.
Daihatsu estimates that the revamped plant will produce 230,000 cars per year, 10,000 more than its previous capacity.
Redesigned with carbon neutrality in mind, the plant's upgrades cost approximately 35 billion Japanese yen.
It now stands four stories tall and brings assembly and painting, previously performed separately, under one roof.
The most significant change is the introduction of robots to automate the painting process.
With the robots' precision, mistakes are greatly reduced.
Splashing of paint is also significantly curbed using static electricity technology that attracts paint particles to the car body.
Based on these upgrades, 50% of the air in the painting booths, where maintaining low-level humidity is essential, has become reusable.
This directly leads to reduced carbon emissions.
In the past, the painting process took a great toll on human workers, who had to wear protective equipment and wash thoroughly.
An employee managing the plant floor explains,
there have been three advantages to automating, saving time, a lesser burden on workers, and emissions reduction.
03:03
Production was optimized by improving tasks that were physically burdensome or cumbersome.
The company installed a conveyor belt for workers, thus reducing the amount of walking, which can take a toll on employees.
Huge paper manuals were converted to digital copies readable on tablets.
Daihatsu estimates that this optimization will result in a 30% reduction in manufacturing time.
Combined with adoption of renewable energies, the refurbishment is predicted to reduce CO2 emissions by 58% in 2025,
compared to 2013 figures.
Hitachi is using a digital twin of its plant, reproduced in a virtual space, to reduce its carbon footprint.
At its Omeka factory in Hitachi City of Ibaraki Prefecture,
the company installed power sensors in roughly 900 spots to visualize the plant's power consumption.
These enable the company to know just where and how much carbon dioxide is emitted by the plant by cross-checking with data obtained from electronic tags built into products and cameras that track the manufacturing process.
The data are then used for simulations on carbon emissions in a virtual space,
allowing the company to verify the outcomes of emissions reduction initiatives.
By 2024, Hitachi plans to apply know-how obtained at the Omeka factory to the decarbonization solutions it sells to other factories.
Meanwhile, in April, Panasonic Holdings began tests at its Kusatsu plant, Shiga Prefecture,
on using 100% renewable energy for all power consumed in the plant by combining hydrogen fuel cells, solar energy, and storage batteries.
In addition to using fuel cells for power supply, solar power generation provides support during the day, and unused electricity is stored in batteries.
The system is designed to address the drawbacks of solar power, which is easily affected by weather, by combining three different types of power cells.
Using energy generated in-house to provide for power needs also eliminates losses that occur during transmission from power plants.
A company representative states,
This is the first attempt globally to genuinely utilize hydrogen for in-house power generation at a factory.
We want to prove that hydrogen is a good option and propose it as a solution going forward.
Major companies are not the only ones working to achieve zero carbon.
Kobe Shushinkan Breweries, located in the famed sake production district of Kobe's Higashinata Ward, launched Fukuju, the world's first carbon neutral sake in October.
The company achieved zero carbon emissions for power used in brewing mainly by sourcing renewable energy from power companies.
06:06
Also, by changing the polishing ratio of rice from 70 to 80 percent and using a different yeast, the company managed to shorten brewing time from the typical one month to one week, thereby reducing power consumption.
The company aims to sell 70,000 bottles annually, including those exported overseas.
Kobe Shushinkan's initiatives encompass not only emissions reduction, but also saving labor and energy in the brewing process.
The typical image of sake brewing often involves craftspeople getting up before dawn and working in the cold.
But the company introduced a remote monitoring system to ease the burden on workers, creating a more pleasant working environment that appeals to young people.
General Manager Masakazu Minatomoto says, in the future, carbon neutrality will likely become an important factor when customers decide on a purchase.
Our aim is to achieve sustainable management, including our working environment.
Regarding how business initiatives aimed toward carbon neutrality seem to be picking up speed,
Associate Professor Songwu Byun of Kendai University's Department of Business Administration points out,
as people grow more conscious of environmental issues, more and more companies recognize the link between their factories and carbon neutrality.
Upgrades to production facilities and processes have been linked to quality enhancement and cost reduction to date.
According to Byun, businesses are increasingly considering carbon neutrality to be equally important.
Byun adds, the Japanese have a concept of the triple win, or sonpo yoshi.
Through carbon neutrality efforts, a business model that is equally good for companies, consumers, and society could be achieved.
And check out our website by clicking on the link in the episode notes.
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And don't forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode.
Until next time, this is Susan Yoshimura of Japan to Earth, signing off.
08:32

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