Japan's greenhouse gas emissions fall 4% in FY23/24 to record low
Japan's greenhouse gas emissions fell by 4% to a record low in the fiscal year ended March 2024, government data showed on Friday, led by lower energy consumption as well as the increased use of renewable energy and the restart of nuclear power plants.
Tokyo: Japan's greenhouse gas emissions fell by 4 per cent to a record low in the fiscal year ended March 2024, government data showed on Friday, led by lower energy consumption as well as the increased use of renewable energy and the restart of nuclear power plants. Emissions for the 2023/24 year dropped to the equivalent of 1.071 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide from 1.116 billion tons a year earlier, data from the environment ministry showed. The latest figure marks the lowest since data collection began in 1990/91 and represents the second year of declines. The industrial sector recorded a 4 per cent decline, while the commercial and services sector saw a 6.2 per cent drop. Emissions from the household sector also fell by 6.8 per cent , and the transportation sector registered a 0.7 per cent decrease. Japan, the world's fifth-biggest CO2 emitter, aims to reduce emissions by 46 per cent from 2013 levels by 2030. The 2023/24 figure represents a reduction of 23.3 per cent from 2013. The amount of greenhouse gases absorbed by forests and other sources in 2023/24 slid by 0.2 per cent to 53.7 million tons, the ministry said. Japan's emissions surged following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, which led to widespread nuclear reactor shutdowns and increased fossil fuel reliance. Emissions peaked at 1.4 billion tons in 2013/14 but have since declined, supported by greater use of renewable energy and the gradual restart of nuclear reactors. In 2023/24, renewable energy accounted for 22.9 per cent of the 987.7 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity generated, up 1.1 percentage points from the previous year. Nuclear energy contributed 8.5 per cent , up 2.9 percentage points. Thermal power made up 68.6 per cent of total electricity generation, down 4 percentage points year-on-year. The breakdown of thermal sources was 28.3 per cent coal, 32.9 per cent natural gas, and 7.4 per cent oil. (Reporting by Yuka Obayashi and Katya Golubkova; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)