Japan to Reveal 'Green Growth' Strategy

Thursday, December 24, 2020
Credit: Max Topchii/AdobeStock

Japan will lay out on Friday a “green growth strategy” that includes a goal to replace gasoline-powered vehicles with electric cars by around 2035, the Nikkei newspaper reported.

The strategy will serve as an action plan to achieve Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s pledge to slash carbon emissions to zero on a net basis in 2050.

Under the strategy, the government will set 14 targets for promoting a greener society, such as installing up to 45 gigawatts of offshore wind power by 2040, the paper said.

The green strategy will also include an estimate that renewable energy will contribute 50-60% of Japan’s total power in 2050, according to the draft of the strategy document obtained by Nikkei.

Suga has made green investment a top policy priority to help revitalize the economy and bring Japan in line with other regions setting ambitious carbon-neutral targets.

Japan will look at reducing greenhouse gas emissions beyond its current target for 2030 and lay out details next year on a carbon pricing scheme that won’t rule out a carbon tax, a government executive told Reuters this week.

(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Richard Pullin)

Categories: Energy Renewable Energy Industry News Offshore Wind Activity Renewables

Related Stories

UK Offshore Wind Industry Employs 40,000 People, New Report Finds

UK Offshore Wind Industry Employs 40,000 People, New Report Finds

UK's Crown Estate Plans $543M Investment in Offshore Wind Supply Chain

UK's Crown Estate Plans $543M Investment in Offshore Wind Supply Chain

JDR Wraps Up Type Test Qualification of Next-Gen Offshore Wind Cables

JDR Wraps Up Type Test Qualification of Next-Gen Offshore Wind Cables

Current News

Qatari Output at Gas Field Shared With Iran Is Steady

Rhino Resources To Drill New Well Offshore Namibia

Fugro-Led BeWild Completes First Fully Remote Ecology Survey at OW Farm

TotalEnergies Secures Offshore Wind Concession in Germany

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

Offshore Engineer Magazine