- 14 Mar 2002
- 15,973
- 9,214
- 749
We knew already he's a political fossil: PM Kishida was awarded the Fossil of the Day award for Japan's continued reliance on thermal power plants. Other recipients: Norway for promoting its own gas, and Australia.
Fossil of the Day 02 November 2021 - Norway, Japan and Australia - Climate Action Network
Today´s list of Fossil Award winners is as long as the queues at COP First Fossil of the Day Award goes to Norway Norway likes to play the climate champion but behind closed doors, new prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre is gaining a reputation as a fossil fuel cheerleader. The Labour leader, who’s...
climatenetwork.org
An international environmental organization announced on Nov. 2 that it has chosen Japan as a recipient of its "Fossil of the Day" award after Prime Minister Fumio Kishida stated Japan will continue to use existing thermal power plants during the COP26 U.N. Climate Change Conference's summit meeting the same day. The Climate Action Network (CAN), a global network of more than 1,500 environmental NGOs in over 130 countries, bestowed Japan with the prize -- given to countries and others that have maintained a negative stance toward climate control -- on the grounds that Prime Minister Kishida has announced a policy to keep thermal power by relying on unestablished technologies even while setting forth a "zero-emission" premise. It gave two other Fossil of the Day awards to Norway and Australia.
Japan wins 'Fossil of the Day' award after PM Kishida pledges to keep coal power at COP26 - The Mainichi
GLASGOW, Scotland (Mainichi) -- An international environmental organization announced on Nov. 2 that it has chosen Japan as a recipient of its
mainichi.jp
"Furthermore, Kishida has had deluded dreams of using ammonia and hydrogen as 'zero-emission thermal power.' He needs to wake up and understand that these novice and costly technologies are linked to fossil fuel extraction and would leave little chance of meeting the global 1.5C degrees targets." The Cabinet approved a basic energy plan in October, which states that Japan will reduce the ratio of fossil fuel-based power to about 40 percent by fiscal 2030 but will keep relying on the power source into 2050.