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Japan to team up with US on cutting drifting offshore wind costs

Japan has consented to partner with the United States to help reduce the expense of floating offshore wind jobs, the White House stated in a statement launched during Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's visit to Washington to meet with President Joe Biden.

Under the contract, Japan and the U.S. would work to speed up advancements in engineering, manufacturing and other locations connected to floating wind farms, the statement said. Tokyo would also contribute 120 billion yen ($ 784 million) to develop drifting wind innovation by means of its Green Innovation Fund.

The United States has actually set an objective of installing 15 gigawatts of drifting offshore wind capacity by 2035 - enough to power more than 5 million homes - to assist displace fossil fuel for power generation and battle climate modification.

The U.S. plan likewise calls for cutting the cost of floating offshore wind setups running in deep waters by more than 70% to $45 per megawatt-hour over the next decade. Drifting wind power installations are generally bigger and costlier than bottom-fixed structures.

Drifting offshore wind is reasonably new in Japan, where state auctions for offshore wind farms have actually so far included just bottom-fixed installations.

Last month, Japanese energy companies consisting of Mitsubishi Corp's wind power unit, Tokyo Gas and JERA teamed-up to collectively develop floating offshore wind technology to assist Japan reach its renewable resource goals.

(source: Reuters)