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Hans De Keulenaer

Environmental Capital - WSJ.com : Cheap Carbon Credits: To Japan, From Russia With Love? - 0 views

  • Japan, famous for its hybrid cars and solar panels, may become an environmental pioneer in another sense: buying cheap carbon offsets abroad to minimize the burden on its domestic industry to clean up its act at home.
Hans De Keulenaer

Japan plans world's fastest maglev train: firm - Yahoo! Singapore News - 0 views

  • TOKYO (AFP) - - A Japanese rail operator said Wednesday it plans to introduce the world's fastest train in the next two decades, a next-generation maglev built at a cost of 45 billion dollars.
David Think

Japan and the Wind Lens concept - 2 views

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    This latest technology was unveiled during Yokohama Renewable Energy Exhibition 2010 and has proved that it is the most innovative and successful technology for wind turbine
Hans De Keulenaer

Japan, U.S., EU to float energy body / Joint proposal to be made at G-8 summit - 0 views

  • Japan, the United States and the European Union will jointly propose at this year's Group of Eight summit meeting that an international organization be established to study and evaluate the energy-saving measures of countries, including China and India, The Yomiuri Shimbun learned Saturday.
Hans De Keulenaer

First Commercial Wireless Electricity Experiment in Japan - 0 views

  • The nighttime experiment is meant to Illuminate the top spire of the mammoth steel structure to demmonstrate the use of the first wireless electricity transfer system in the World. The test is designed to transfer about 1200 watts of power at a range of 100 feet and will be a first of its kind use of a system Japanese scientists are developing to transmit power at distances they hope could reach 300 feet using a science that is based on magnetically coupled resonance.
Hans De Keulenaer

Japan Launches First Satellite to Monitor Greenhouse Gases Worldwide : Sustainablog - 0 views

  • The Japanese government has launched the first satellite to monitor greenhouse gases worldwide. This tool will help scientists better ascertain where global warming emissions are coming from and how much is being absorbed by the oceans and forests. The U.S. will launch a similar orbiter next month.
Hans De Keulenaer

Tokyo Advocates Smart Power Saving with New Energy Management Promotion Policy | Japan ... - 1 views

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    The Tokyo Metropolitan Government (TMG) announced on May 14, 2012, that it has formulated a policy for promoting energy conservation and management, titled "Toward a Smart Energy City Beyond Power-Saving" (unofficial translation). In addition to i...
Colin Bennett

Consumers are getting smart about energy use | Energy Efficiency News - 0 views

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    The survey of over 5000 energy consumers in twelve countries including the UK, Germany, France, Japan, New Zealand and the US found that many consumers are now actively seeking more information about their energy supply and usage. Over 90% of respondents said that they would like a smart meter to manage their energy usage and improve efficiency.
Gary Edwards

Next Generation Nuclear Power: Scientific American - 0 views

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    Six page article from 2003 provides an in depth discussion on existing and Future Nuclear Systems:  "In Response to the difficulties in achieving sustainability, a sufficiently high degree of safety and a competitive economic basis for nuclear power, the U.S. Department of Energy initiated the Generation IV program in 1999. Generation IV refers to the broad division of nuclear designs into four categories: early prototype reactors (Generation I), the large central station nuclear power plants of today (Generation II), the advanced lightwater reactors and other systems with inherent safety features that have been designed in recent years (Generation III), and the next-generation systems to be designed and built two decades from now (Generation IV) [see box on opposite page]. By 2000 international interest in the Generation IV project had resulted in a nine-country coalition that includes Argentina, Brazil, Canada, France, Japan, South Africa, South Korea, the U.K. and the U.S. Participating states are mapping out and collaborating on the research and development of future nuclear energy systems."
Hans De Keulenaer

World's First Wave Powered Boat : MetaEfficient - 0 views

  • Ken-ichi Horie, a 69 year old Japanese sailor, is planning a solo 4,350 mile trip from Hawaii to Japan using an innovative wave powered boat. If successful, the trip would earn him a Guinness record while simultaneously proving the viability of wave powered propulsion.
davidchapman

The Energy Blog: Lithium Energy Japan Established to Produce Lithium-ion Batteries - 0 views

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    "Lithium Energy Japan" to produce large capacity and high performance lithium-ion batteries. ...automated mass production lines within a 7000m2 facility at GS Yuasa's Kyoto's head office plant, capable of manufacturing 200,000 cells per year. Operations were slated to commence by 2009.
Colin Bennett

Solar and Wind Powered StreetLights In Tokyo : MetaEfficient - 0 views

  • We just wrote about the new LED streelights in Ann Arbor. Now we find these self-contained streetlights that generate 100% of their power from the sun and the wind. During the day, solar power is stored in a battery at the base of the light pole. At night, they illuminate while continuing to generate power via a small vertical-axis wind turbine. The streetlights, dubbed “seagulls”, were spotted in Tokyo outside the Panasonic Center by Hyperexperience. Here’s a video clip of the wind turbine in action:
Hans De Keulenaer

Toyota moves to test plug-in Prius in Japan | Gristmill: The environmental news blog | ... - 0 views

  • Toyota Motor Co. will obtain permission from Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport by the end of July for the testing of a prototype plug-in Prius on public roads
  • Toyota Motor Co. will obtain permission from Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport by the end of July for the testing of a prototype plug-in Prius on public roads
davidchapman

Paper and carbon nanotube battery developed, and it's flexible | Tech news blog - CNET ... - 0 views

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    The device is a piece of paper infused with carbon nanotubes and a salt, which serves as an electrolyte. Because it stores energy and conducts it, the device can act like a battery. A number of corporate labs and universities have come up with flexible batteries in the past. Power Paper from Israel makes a flexible battery printed on polymers that relies on zinc as an electrolyte. It sells it to the cosmetics industry. Japan Inc. also has trotted out a lot of prototypes. Still, these things haven't gone commercial so any advance is welcome.
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    The device is a piece of paper infused with carbon nanotubes and a salt, which serves as an electrolyte. Because it stores energy and conducts it, the device can act like a battery. A number of corporate labs and universities have come up with flexible batteries in the past. Power Paper from Israel makes a flexible battery printed on polymers that relies on zinc as an electrolyte. It sells it to the cosmetics industry. Japan Inc. also has trotted out a lot of prototypes. Still, these things haven't gone commercial so any advance is welcome.
Colin Bennett

1st World Ranking of Clean Energy Technology (CET) Sales - 3 views

  • The current rankings put the US 18th according to GDP (2nd in absolute terms) and the UK is 19th. Australia “squandered an early technical lead in solar energy” and is 28th. Spain is 4th relative to GDP, Finland is 5th and China 6th. In absolute terms, the top ten countries are: 1. Germany, 2. the US, 3. Japan, 4. China, 5. Denmark, 6. Brazil, 7. Spain, 8. France, 9. the UK, 10. Korea.
Energy Net

Japan Proposes Wind, Geothermal Power Feed-in Tariff (Update1) - Bloomberg.com - 0 views

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    "A Japanese trade ministry panel today proposed expanding the feed-in tariff to require utilities to buy electricity at a premium from hydropower stations, wind turbine and geothermal operators. Utilities may have to buy renewable power at between 15 yen (17 cents) and 20 yen a kilowatt hour, according to a report released in Tokyo today. The incentive program would run for between 10 and 20 years, it said. The government wants to supply 10 percent of the country's primary energy from renewable sources by 2020, compared with about 3 percent in 2007, according to the International Energy Agency. The proposed tariff compares with 5 to 7 yen a kilowatt hour utilities pay for nuclear power and about 8 yen for oil- fired generation, said Tomohiro Jikihara, an analyst at Deutsche Securities Inc. in Tokyo. "
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