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Japan targets 40-50% power supply from renewable energy by 2040

Japan wants renewable energy to account for approximately 50% of its electrical energy mix by fiscal year 2040 with nuclear power using up another 20%, according to a. draft of its revised standard energy policy, as it makes a tidy. energy push while meeting rising power need.

As the world's second-largest importer of melted natural. gas and a major consumer of Middle Eastern oil, Japan and its. fundamental energy plans are drawing worldwide attention from oil, gas. and coal producers.

Thermal power usage, particularly from inefficient. coal-fired power plants, is set to decrease to in between 30% and. 40% by 2040 from 68.6% in 2023, although the draft energy policy. does not specify the breakdown of coal, gas and oil.

It is necessary to use LNG-fired power as a sensible. ways of shift, and the government and the private sector. need to jointly protect the required long-lasting LNG contracts in. preparation for threats such as price walkings and supply. disruptions, the draft said.

The market ministry's policy draft unveiled on Tuesday. proposes increasing renewables to between 40% and 50% of power. products in the 2040 fiscal year, roughly doubling the 22.9%. share in the 2023 and surpassing the 2030 target of. between 36% and 38%.

Japan's 2040 nuclear power target is in line with the 2030. target of in between 20% and 22%, in spite of the challenges faced by. the market after the 2011 Fukushima catastrophe. Nuclear power. represented 8.5% of the nation's power supply in 2023.

The brand-new energy plan gets rid of the previous target of reducing. dependence on nuclear power as much as possible and consists of. plans to build ingenious next-generation reactors at nuclear. power sites owned by operators who have chosen to decommission. existing reactors.

(source: Reuters)