Japan pledges financial support to help Asean decarbonise

Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura attended the first ministerial meeting of the Asia Zero Emission Community on March 4. PHOTO: REUTERS

TOKYO - Japan pledged financial and technological support on Saturday to help Asean countries accelerate their efforts to decarbonise their economies and combat climate change.

Energy-poor Japan hopes to become the world’s leading hydrogen economy to reduce dependence on traditional polluting fossil fuels such as coal and oil.

As the chair of the Group of Seven nations (G-7) in 2023, Japan will hold a ministerial meeting on climate, energy and environment in Sapporo on April 15-16, ahead of the G-7 summit in Hiroshima on May 19-21, to promote what it calls realistic energy transition.

“Japan will take a lead in providing generous support in finance, technology and personal resources to help Asia’s decarbonisation,” Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told the first ministerial meeting of the Asia Zero Emission Community (AZEC).

The AZEC was proposed by Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in 2022 with the aim of sharing the philosophy of promoting decarbonisation in Asian nations and cooperating to push forward energy transition.

At the meeting, attended by several Asean members and Australia, Mr Nishimura said the push for collaboration will include renewable power, natural gas, hydrogen and ammonia, among other areas.

AZEC, in a joint statement, called for the group to financially support investments into decarbonisation infrastructure and creation of clean energy supply chains.

Neither the statement nor Mr Nishimura provided a potential amount for the spending.

“As many countries have expressed wishes for support from Japan, we would like to take a strong leadership in supporting them in technology, finance, including investment from private sector, and human resource development,” Mr Nishimura told a briefing.

The AZEC members – Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam – could consider creating a master plan for hydrogen and ammonia in Asia as a next step, he added.

As a first concrete step under the AZEC, Japanese companies, including Iwatani Corp and Electric Power Development, have agreed to jointly create Japan’s first hydrogen supply chain between Australia’s Victoria state and Kawasaki, an industrialised city near Tokyo, to advance energy transition towards a cleaner society, Mr Nishimura said.

Japan will stress the importance of investment in gas, liquefied natural gas as well as hydrogen and ammonia during its presidency of the G-7 in 2023 but would keep it clean to meet 2050 carbon-neutral goal, a source said this week. REUTERS

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