Article URL
https://featured.japan-forward.com/japan2earth/2022/10/1417/


Our Purpose

Japan 2 Earth delivers stories and insights that highlight contributions by Japanese communities and companies to improving the global environment and achieving the SDGs.


Twitter
https://twitter.com/japan_2_earth

WEB
https://featured.japan-forward.com/japan2earth/

 


Managing Editor
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.


Our Focus Areas

[ Japanese Technologies ]
Showcasing innovative technologies, from recycling and waste to transportation and beyond

[ Earth's Diversity ]
Drawing attention to biodiversity, and efforts to protect our oceans, skies, forests and waters

[ Climate Change ]
Delivering information on impacts, mitigation, adaptation and what we can do

[ Clean Energy ]
Exploring options, from renewables and clean coal to nuclear-to-hydrogen and biomass, along with the constraints, byproducts and trade-offs involved

[ Op Ed ]
Bringing you leading ideas, dialogue and hot debate, from all sides of the issues


Tokyo Sankei Bldg., Otemachi 1-7-2, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, Japan 100-0004

E-mail:    japan2earth@japan-forward.com
Phone:    +81-(0)3-3275-8511

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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.
Using CO2 as a valuable resource is key to Japan's decarbonization.
Carbon recycling technologies that use carbon dioxide, CO2, as a resource are gaining attention as a means to attain Japan's decarbonization goal of net zero greenhouse gas emissions, carbon neutrality, by 2050.
Even as technological innovation progresses, a certain amount of CO2 emissions cannot be avoided. If a scheme for producing chemical products and fuels using CO2 as a resource could be established, emissions could be reduced, bringing Japan closer to its carbon neutrality goal.
In mid-September, Japan's first large-scale research facility on related technology was completed based on cooperation between industry, academia, and the government. Japan has a competitive edge in many fields, although issues of production cost remain, and research related to these fields is attracting attention.
We must find ways to create value from CO2, and partnerships are essential. We have to create the conditions for the market to accept products made from CO2.
These were statements made at the International Conference on Carbon Recycling, held on September 26 and sponsored by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, IMEDI. Representatives from industry, academia, and government were involved.
This year marked the fourth time the conference, which garnered roughly 1,200 participants, was held. Twenty-three countries were represented by government officials, international organizations, and researchers.
Lively discussions and exchanges of opinions took place over the four-hour session on how policies to promote the circulation of goods made from carbon recycling. The Japanese government plans to reduce CO2 emissions to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 based on encouraging the widespread use of solar, wind, and other renewable energies, and effective utilization of nuclear power.
However, a certain level of CO2 emissions, such as those from steel and chemical factories, are unavoidable. To reach carbon neutrality, ways to reduce these unavoidable CO2 emissions from industry will be key.
03:00
Hopes are high for carbon recycling, using CO2 as a resource and an effective solution to this challenge. MITI provides financial backing for cooperation between industry, academia, and the government on the research and development of new technologies. It also proactively cooperates with other countries researching in the field, including the U.S.
Osaki-Kamijima, Hiroshima Prefecture, is an island located in the middle of the Seto Inland Sea, home to Chugoku Electric's Osaki Power Station. On this approximately 14,300 square meters site, the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, NEDO, recently completed Japan's first large-scale research facility based on cooperation between industry, academia, and the government.
Universities and companies will use the facility to conduct foundational research and experimental studies on 10 different topics, including storing CO2 in concrete and the efficient production of seaweed that serves as raw material for sustainable aviation fuel, SAF. Replacing petroleum-based fuels and chemicals with products made using CO2 as a resource is expected to reduce carbon emissions.
Carbon recycling is a key technology for achieving carbon neutrality. We hope our facility will contribute to the practical implementation of these technologies in society in the near future, said Ryuji Satomi, parliamentary vice minister of MITI, at the opening ceremony held on September 14.
MITI has the widespread use of SAF and other chemical products slated for the 2030s in its technology roadmap for the expansion of carbon recycling technologies. If successful, MITI plans to further expand the use of a wider variety of products by the 2040s.
A researcher from the Institute of Microalgal Technology, Japan, who studies the seaweed that serves as raw material for SAF, remarked, how to reduce production costs is a challenge.
Work is ongoing at the new facility aimed at making seaweed production more efficient to lower the cost of SAF manufacturing. Researchers are experimenting with a range of light intensity and water temperature settings.
06:00
Concrete is relatively easy to use for making roads. However, like SAF, making concrete that stores CO2 comes with high production costs. According to a representative of Chugaku Electric Power involved in the research, it is three to five times more costly than conventional concrete.
Furthermore, CO2 storing concrete is more acidic than the more alkaline conventional concrete, so comes with a higher risk of corroding the steel used in bridges and the foundations of high-rise buildings. Finding a solution for this technical challenge will likely raise production costs even more.
Solutions to these various issues must be found for these technologies to be put into use in the near future.
There are several areas in which Japanese companies and universities currently have a competitive edge internationally. These include technologies related to carbon recycling, such as the separation and retrieval of CO2.
However, European and North American countries are also quite active with government-backed research projects, and competition on new technologies is increasingly fierce.
Government policy will be instrumental if Japan is to produce tangible results and take the lead on the world stage in carbon recycling.
MITI is called upon both to effectively use the 2 trillion yen fund allocated to support the NEDO research facility and companies proactively engaged in decarbonization technologies, and to carry out joint research with other countries.
If you enjoyed this story, do let us know, and check out our website by clicking on the link in the episode notes. You can follow us on Twitter for our latest news.
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.
08:12

コメント

スクロール