Bringing in innovators and entrepreneurs with diverse technologies from around the world, the Tokyo event aimed to create new models for sustainability.

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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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Introduction to SDGs in the NEWS Podcast
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.
Sustainability in the Spotlight at CityTech.Tokyo Startup Event
Bringing in innovators and entrepreneurs with diverse technologies from around the world, the Tokyo event aimed to create new models for sustainability.
Japan's capital hosted CityTech.Tokyo on February 27-28, a startup-centered event, where many of its actors brought innovative solutions in the field of sustainability.
It's the first event of its kind, bringing together university ventures and startups from Japan and the world, with the aim to create a startup hub in Asia.
And ventures aiming to make our world more sustainable were taking center stage.
For example, one of the main appeals of the event was the CityTech Challenge, a pitch competition where startups would compete for a grand prize of 10 million Japanese yen, $73,613.
Startups tackling sustainability problems
Kyoto Fusioneering Ltd. brought home the top prize, with their vision to deliver a new energy future for humankind, according to the company website.
Many startups present at the event tackled problems related to sustainability.
A good example is Voda, a Japanese venture which has the ambitious aim of universal water provision, which started in 2014.
The company develops products that, through AI, filter water at 98% so that it can be recycled.
Its shower box, called VodaBox, achieved the seemingly impossible feat of providing 100 showers with only 100 liters of water.
Thanks to the easy setup, this product is well-placed for disaster-affected areas or those with little infrastructure.
One of the VodaBox's most recent applications was providing shower boxes for earthquake-hit regions in Turkey and Syria.
Other companies took on the problem of upcycling waste materials.
They include Singaporean venture Ultrapacks, which uses organic waste to produce food packaging which is both durable and biodegradable.
The idea was born during the pandemic when CEO and founder Karen Chia thought she could do her part for the environment.
She has created containers that lend themselves well to packed lunches, a common staple in Japan.
Highlighting the importance of initiatives like hers, she pointed out, Japan is the third country in the world in terms of use of plastic containers.
The packages are also surprisingly sturdy, as the containers are designed to withstand temperatures from minus 18C to over 260C.
You can put it, the container, over an open flame, you can boil water, and then you can put it in the freezer, says Chia.
The company's innovative approach was recognized with several special prizes under the City Tech Challenge competition, according to the Tokyo Metropolitan Government press release.
Innovative Food and Beverage Upcycling
Another interesting item was provided by Crust, a company also born in Singapore, which uses bread crusts and vegetable or fruit peel to create new beverages.
The company is poised to enter the Japanese market.
There aren't that many companies that upcycle in Japan, and we see an opportunity in that, said Hiroyuki Hirano, head of business development.
A Japanese company born in Iwate, Japan, Ferment Station, uses fermentation to upcycle food waste that would otherwise be discarded.
Using Japanese fermentation products, it processes items like rice and foodstuff into by-products, such as ethanol, that can then be used in other sectors.
COO Shota Kitabatake explained how the start of the company came from a need in the community in Iwate, there were rice fields that were not being used, and the locals were trying to revive the industry.
Since it was difficult to sell the rice, they thought they could try to sell rice-derived products, such as alcohol, thanks to the process of fermentation.
And that is how the business was born.
Fermentation is something that Japan is very strong at, but the topic of food waste and food loss still needs to be addressed in Japan, so we wanted to be the ones to connect these two concepts together, explained Kitabatake.
Ferment Station's COO was optimistic about the business prospects.
He says that large cosmetics companies are starting to use these by-products, so there seems to be a need in the market.
More widely, Kitabatake was optimistic about the prospect of sustainable business in Japan.
We started in 2009, when sustainability was still not a buzzword.
Introduction and Conclusion
I think the culture is really changing, he said.
That brings us to the end of today's article.
If you enjoyed this story, do let us know, 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.
05:58

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