Offshore wind is the “biggest gap” to unlock a decarbonised power sector for Japan, according to a new report from energy think tank Ember.
Based on current plans, Japan will represent just 4% of the total 150GW of offshore wind that the G7 announced they will collectively build by 2030.
Japan plans to award offshore wind contracts to 10GW prior to 2030, but it has given no expectation that more than 5.7GW will be operational by then.
This means, Japan’s operational offshore wind is projected to be just 4% of the total 150GW that the G7 announced they plan to build by 2030.
It is also only a little over 1% of the 392GW theoretical potential of offshore wind power in the country.
Japan is also discussing how much capacity should be contracted by 2040: it could be as little as 30GW or as much as 45GW.
“Japan is losing the race to decarbonised electricity,” said Ember’s head of data insights, Dave Jones.
He added: “There is a huge gap in ambition on offshore wind between Japan and the rest of the G7.”
Japan’s electricity transition is lagging behind the G7 nations as it has the lowest clean power share of any G7 country (29%), and the highest coal share (33%), Ember’s data analysis shows.
As a result, Japan has the most carbon-intensive electricity in the G7.
Japan could achieve up to 90% decarbonised electricity by 2035 with enough deployment of renewables, according to pathways from recent reports such as by the Lawrence Berkeley Lab.
The scenario is only achievable if Japan can harness offshore wind and ramp-up its clean power ambitions, Ember found.
In 2022, wind generated just 1% of the country’s electricity. For the rest of the G7, wind power generated 11% of the total electricity production.
In the United States, wind generated 10% of electricity and in the United Kingdom it was around 25% in 2022.


