Japanese Getting Heated Over Geothermal Power
Posted by Big Gav in geothermal power, japan, onsen
The Guardian has an article on opposition to a potential geothermal power boom in Japan, from traditional hot spring owners worried they will be put out of business - Japanese spa town in a lather over geothermal plans. Hopefully the 2 industries will find a way to coexist.
A deep breath is all that's needed to appreciate why Kusatsu is ideally suited to lead Japan's quest for new sources of renewable energy.
As the steam rises from myriad holes in the ground, the air is filled with the unmistakable stench of sulphur. The pong is inescapable - it hangs on your clothes for days - but the volcanically heated water that creates it is the lifeblood of this spa town 90 miles northeast of Tokyo.
As Japan seeks new ways to honour its Kyoto protocol commitments on CO2, Kusatsu's bathers are up in arms over plans to tap into rich reservoirs of geothermal energy, a move they say threatens their inalienable right to soak in the restorative waters of a natural spa.
In April a government panel of industry experts and academics is expected to call for substantial investment in geothermal plants for the first time in more than two decades.
The envisioned new generation of power plants will tap into Japan's vast supply of heated water and steam, nestling deep below ground and sustained by the country's 108 active volcanoes. The result, the government says, will be an inexhaustible supply of cheap, clean energy that will also ease the country's $183bn a year dependence on Middle East oil.
Geothermal developers insist that power plants and Japan's thousands of spas - or onsen - can happily coexist. But the 7,400 people of Kusatsu, more than 90% of whom depend on the tourist trade for their living, are not convinced.
The fear that energy development will rob the town of its precious supply of hot, mineral-rich water has propelled them to the forefront of the anti-geothermal movement. Their nemesis is the nearby village of Tsumagoi, whose mayor has proposed the construction of a geothermal plant 4km from its nervous neighbour. ...
Kusatsu's revered hot springs are fed by water resting deep underground and kept at a piping-hot 54C by the 2,160-metre volcano Mount Shirane. The water, which gushes out of the ground at a rate of 34,000 litres a minute, is then cooled for the benefit of the three million bathers who visit the town every year.
Unlike many other spas, the water rises to the surface naturally and is used to heat schools, homes and roads during the town's bitterly cold winters. The spa was discovered 1,800 years ago, according to local legend, and by the Edo era the shogun Tokugawa Yoshimune had Kusatsu water delivered to the capital.
Though faced with centuries of tradition and legions of irate bathers, Japan's power companies view geothermal power as a potential bonanza at a time when plans to dramatically increase nuclear power have fallen foul of accidents and opposition from towns near the proposed sites of new reactors.