On Tuesday, RE100, a global corporate initiative promoting renewable energy procurement, urged the Japanese government to swiftly and decisively triple its renewable electricity capacity by 2035 compared to 2022 levels.
Japan is currently developing its next basic energy plan, a crucial long-term strategy for the nation. The plan focuses on balancing energy security and decarbonization efforts to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.
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The initiative, boasting over 400 global members, reported that half of them are active in Japan, with 87 based there.
According to RE100, Japan is ranked as the second most challenging market for securing renewable power due to high costs and limited availability.
Currently, members with operations in Japan meet only 25% of their electricity demands with renewables, which is half of the global average.
Over 100 countries, including Japan, committed to tripling the global renewable energy capacity by 2030 at the United Nations COP28 climate summit in Dubai last year. This pledge aims to reduce the reliance on fossil fuels in global energy production.
“Now those commitments need to be met by concrete action to rapidly increase Japan’s installed renewables capacity,” Ollie Wilson, the head of RE100, said in the statement.
RE100 advised Japan to establish a target in its forthcoming energy plan to increase installed renewable capacity from 121 gigawatts (GW) in 2022 to at least 363 GW by 2035, according to a statement released.