Home International Heat-battered Japan issues warning over possible power crunch

Heat-battered Japan issues warning over possible power crunch

115

The Japanese government warned on Sunday that electric power supplies would be strained in the Tokyo area on Monday, calling on people to save energy as scorching summer heat batters the capital.

Visitors take photos with Tokyo’s night view during a “totally dark time” event at Sunshine City’s Observatory in Tokyo, Japan. File picture/Kim Kyung-Hoon

YOKOHAMA – The Japanese government warned on Sunday that electric power supplies would be strained in the Tokyo area on Monday, calling on people to save energy as scorching summer heat batters the capital.

In Tokyo and eight nearby prefectures in eastern Japan, excess generating capacity will drop as low as 3.7% for half an hour on Monday afternoon until 5pm (0800 GMT), according to estimates released by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI). A buffer of 3% is considered the minimum required for a stable power supply.

The ministry urged users to curb power consumption between 3pm and 6pm to avert a possible power crunch.

“Please save as much power as possible, such as by turning off lights that are not in use,” it said in a statement.

The ministry also urged care to avoid heat stroke with appropriate use of air conditioning.

As of mid-afternoon on Sunday, 46 people in Tokyo had been taken to hospital with suspected heat stroke, public broadcaster NHK said.

Separately, a 94-year-old man in Kawagoe city, 20 kilometres north-west of Tokyo, died of suspected heat stroke after he was discovered unconscious in his non-air conditioned room on Saturday, NHK said.

Isezaki city, 85 kilometres north-west of Tokyo, logged Japan’s highest temperature ever for June on Saturday, breaking above 40 degrees Celsius), according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.

Japan’s power supply has been tight with many of its nuclear power plants still shut after the tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster of 2011, while ageing thermal power plants are being closed in part to reach its goal to cut carbon dioxide emissions.

The country also faces a potential shortage of fossil fuels, including liquefied natural gas, due to the conflict in Ukraine and sanctions against Russia.

– REUTERS

Previous articlePats on back, all smiles as Macron, Johnson appear to bury hatchet for G7
Next articleProtesters at US Supreme Court decry abortion ruling overturning Roe v Wade