logo
Japan designates two Hokkaido sites for offshore wind auctions

Japan designates two Hokkaido sites for offshore wind auctions

Reuters6 days ago
TOKYO, July 30 (Reuters) - Japan's industry and land ministers on Wednesday designated Matsumae and Hiyama, areas off the northern island of Hokkaido, as promotion zones for upcoming offshore wind power auctions, aiming to bolster the country's renewable energy goals.
The government will develop guidelines for the use of the zones and launch a public tender to choose operators for energy projects, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) and the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) said in a joint statement. However, no timeline for the next auction was provided.
Japan aims to have 45 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity by 2040, which is essential to cutting the country's reliance on imported fossil fuels for power generation, reducing its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and bolstering national security.
But progress has stalled following three major rounds of auctions. Trading house Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T), opens new tab, the winner in the government's first major auction in 2021, cautioned in February that surging costs had forced it to review its plans.
Japan is likely to sweeten terms for developers to build a massive offshore wind farm sector, industry insiders say, as it looks to put its energy ambitions back on track against a worldwide slump of projects hit by soaring costs and delays.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US EPA moves to cancel $7 billion in grants for solar energy, NYT reports
US EPA moves to cancel $7 billion in grants for solar energy, NYT reports

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

US EPA moves to cancel $7 billion in grants for solar energy, NYT reports

Aug 5 (Reuters) - The Trump administration is preparing to terminate $7 billion in federal grants intended to help low and moderate-income families install solar panels on their homes, the New York Times reported on Tuesday, citing two people briefed on the matter. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is drafting termination letters to the 60 nonprofit groups and state agencies that received grants under the "Solar for All" program, with the goal of sending the letters by the end of this week, the report said, citing the two people. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

India scraps central renewable energy pricing pools to speed up power deals
India scraps central renewable energy pricing pools to speed up power deals

Reuters

time7 hours ago

  • Reuters

India scraps central renewable energy pricing pools to speed up power deals

Aug 5 (Reuters) - India has scrapped a central pricing system for renewable energy projects after developers raised concerns that it was slowing down power deals, as per a memo seen by Reuters. The Ministry of Power said it was dissolving the solar power central pool and the solar-wind hybrid central pool, set up in February 2024 to standardise tariffs for clean energy projects over a three-year period, the memo dated August 1 said. The pools were part of a uniform renewable energy tariff (URET) mechanism aimed at protecting buyers from fluctuating prices. However, developers and government renewable agencies raised concerns that the buyers were hesitant to sign contracts due to uncertainty over future tariffs for three years, the memo said. India has a large pipeline of renewable energy projects waiting for power sale agreements and to avoid further delays, the ministry said it was withdrawing the order. India's stranded renewable power capacity - projects awarded but unable to come online - more than doubled over nine months, due to unfinished transmission lines, and legal and regulatory delays, Reuters reported last week. While the pools will no longer exist, the government said bids already received and letters of award issued under the scheme will remain valid.

As China's renewable capacity soars, utilisation lags, data show
As China's renewable capacity soars, utilisation lags, data show

Reuters

time8 hours ago

  • Reuters

As China's renewable capacity soars, utilisation lags, data show

BEIJING, Aug 5 (Reuters) - China's renewable power potential in far-flung provinces is increasingly going unused, official statistics showed on Monday, as the country rushes to build more long-distance transmission and energy storage to bridge the gap. The curtailment rate for solar power rose to 6.6% in the first half of 2025 from 3.9% in the same period a year earlier while the rate for wind rose to 5.7% from 3%, according to the National New Energy Consumption Monitoring and Early Warning Center. Curtailment refers to how much grid managers have to limit the amount of power coming into the grid to maintain a balance with demand or due to grid infrastructure constraints. China has a national-level limit of 10% curtailment for renewables, a figure it relaxed last year from 5% previously as it became harder to incorporate rising amounts of renewable energy into the grid. China added 268GW of new solar and wind power in January-June, according to the energy administrator - nearly equal to all of the wind and solar the United States has ever built. On the curtailment front, China's national-level figures masked a larger increase in some renewable-heavy provinces. Tibet curtailed 30.2% of its wind power in the first half of 2025 compared with 2.3% a year earlier. It curtailed 33.9% of its solar power, up from 5.1%. Qinghai in the northwest curtailed 15.2% of its solar power, up from 8.8%. Regions with higher electricity demand continued to report low curtailment rates, including none in the megacities of Shanghai and Chongqing as well as in Fujian province. Underutilisation of renewables is spurring China to switch its focus from rapidly building renewable plants to making sure more of their power gets into the grid, analysts say. "China will still push for decarbonisation, but not necessarily on renewable installation. China might switch its policy focus or target focus from installation volume" to utilisation, Natixis economist Haoxin Mu said. More energy storage is needed, Mu said, which could help increase renewable utilisation by storing excess power when supply outpaces demand. Rising curtailment is also one reason China is investing in projects like the world's largest hydropower dam in Tibet, analysts at BMI said in a July note. Unlike wind and solar, hydropower is dispatchable, meaning output can be adjusted based on demand. China is also responding to increasing curtailment of non-hydro renewables over the past two years by building more high-voltage power transmission, the BMI analysts said, to move electricity from huge power plants in the west to electricity-hungry cities in the east.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store