Solar power generation made up some 10% of the peak summer electricity supplies of Japan’s nine major utilities, the Ashai newspaper reported on Thursday.
While solar power contributes only about 2% of annual power generation in the country, sunny skies throughout the summer increased power output, generating a total of some 15 GW of power in early August.
Japan has invested billions of dollars in renewable energy since 2012, when it introduced a feed-in tariff (FIT) program in an effort to reduce its reliance on nuclear power in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima catastrophe.
According to the Asahi report, the ratio of solar power at peak hours ranged from 5.9% at the Hokuriku Electric Power utility to as high as 24.6% at Kyushu Electric Power.
Installed solar capacity benefitting from the country’s FIT scheme reached more than 24 GW at the end of April, according to government data, up from about 5 GW before the program was launched.
The increase in data centre demand is being overshadowed by the much larger increase in…
AEMC commissioner Rainer Korte on what the new rules on reporting and data sharing will…
Developer says it is good to go on early works and construction of the largest…
AEMO says proof that grid forming battery inverters can deliver heartbeat of the grid will…
Days after lodging new plans for a more than 500 MW wind farm, Squadron dumps…
AEMO’S head of systems Nicola Falcon on the 2026 ISP and the importance of grid…