
Switch from nuclear power would
cost Japan $280 bln-Greenpeace
Sept. 12, 2011 - Natalia Konstantinovskaya
- trust.org
TOKYO, Sept 12 (Reuters) - Shifting
away from nuclear power and replacing it with wind
and solar energy would cost Japan around $280 billion
in new investment by 2020, Greenpeace said on Monday,
calling on Tokyo to ensure safety for future power
generations.
The report comes as Japan debates the future of
nuclear energy after the March quake and tsunami
triggered the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25
years at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who took office early
this month, has said the government wants to restart
off-line nuclear reactors once safety checks were
cleared, with the understanding of local communities.
Some 70 percent of people in Japan oppose nuclear
energy and think it is necessary to pursue alternative
sources of power despite its potential cost.
Currently, only 11 out of 54 reactors are operating
in Japan following maintenance checks due to heightened
public worries. That means only 20 percent of the
nation's total nuclear power capacity is in use.
Solar and wind power account for about one percent
of the country's electricity.
In a green energy scenario that includes a small
increase in gas-fired power generation, the environmental
lobby proposed raising generating capacity from wind
turbines to 56 gigawatts from 2.1 GW and that from
solar panels to 57 GW from 3.6 GW.
Greenpeace also says the cost of electricity from
solar power, which is now higher than that from fossil
fuels, should fall to competitive levels as technology
advances.
"The price (of solar energy) dropped more than
50 percent in the last year in Europe and will go
down another 20 percent in the next 12 months," said
Sven Teske, senior energy expert at Greenpeace International.
"There are a lot of Chinese companies that
manufacture solar panels and competition is enormous," he
added.
Greenpeace wants Japan to cut its capacity for coal-fired
energy by 60 percent to 19.3 GW within 10 years.
Japan should also cut its capacity from oil-fired
power stations by 16 percent, while increasing slightly
the capacity of power generated from natural gas,
it added. (Reporting By Natalia Konstantinovskaya;
Editing by Yoko Nishikawa)
|