Japan Chooses Reliable Energy Over Climate Nonsense

By Vijay Jayaraj

Not long ago, Japan stood before the world pledging to become a paragon of decarbonization.  Government papers were filled with talk of hydrogen corridors, offshore wind farms, and electric vehicle subsidies.

To satisfy international climate lobbies, Japan planned for years to phase out coal. Operations at coal-fired power plants were restricted to only 50% capacity. Political leaders spoke solemnly of a “moral duty” to achieve “carbon neutrality” by 2050, pledging a 60% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2035 and a 73% cut by 2040, both measured from 2013 levels.

But as geopolitical reality intruded, this stance dissipated.

More Oil for Japan and Its Neighbors

Japan is among the world’s top five oil importers, importing more than 94% of its crude oil from the Middle East. When transit through the Strait of Hormuz was interrupted, the impact was immediate.

Officials introduced subsidies to keep regular gasoline prices from climbing beyond tolerable levels. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi quickly ordered the release of 80 million barrels from oil stockpiles, equivalent to about 45 days of domestic demand. Releases began in mid-March from sites across the country. A fuel once portrayed as the enemy in net zero rhetoric now receives protection to prevent economic disruption.

Japan is preparing to formalize a new energy‑first posture in a revised strategy to be unveiled in August. Greater weight will be given to the security of fossil fuel supplies. Imports are already increasing from the United States, Canada, Mexico, Central and South America, Africa, and other parts of Asia. The prime minister anticipates avoiding altogether shipping through Hormuz.

For the first time, crude oil from the United States has arrived directly in Japan: Cosmo Oil recently brought into Tokyo Bay 910,000 barrels of U.S. crude.  Japan Petroleum Exploration plans to quadruple its oil and gas output over the next decade—up to 180,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2035—backed by $7.3 billion in exploration and production spending, with over 50% that money going towards U.S. assets.

Tokyo has also refused to abandon fossil fuel supplies that are politically awkward but strategically valuable. Despite being an U.S. ally, Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister, Ryosei Akazawa, describes even Russian crude as “extremely important” to Japanese security.

There’s a reason why Tokyo is putting its money into procuring crude: Oil is built into everything. Japan’s vast petrochemical industry, anchored by giants such as Idemitsu Kosan, JXTG Nippon Oil & Energy, and Mitsui Chemicals, converts crude into synthetic fibers, fertilizers, resins, paints, and electronic components.

These products form the largely unseen foundation of modern manufacturing. Every smartphone, car dashboard, and solar panel relies on petrochemicals. Without them, Japan’s export engine would grind to a halt. Substances much demonized by net zero enthusiasts are used to make semiconductors, ship coatings, and electric-vehicle batteries.

Beyond its borders, Japan is supporting development of oil resources through the new Partnership on Wide Energy and Resources Resilience (POWERR) Asia framework. Tokyo has committed $10 billion to support crude procurement, bolster strategic reserves, and shore up logistics for import‑dependent countries across Southeast Asia.

Coal is Not Forgotten

Japan, like its neighbor South Korea, is reopening coal-fired power plants once condemned as relics of a dirtier era. Energy officials cited “extraordinary supply uncertainty” as justification for using the same fuel they had promised to eliminate.

Representatives from Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) stated that increasing coal operations serves as an immediate solution to conserve natural gas. The agency noted that increasing uncertainty regarding the future availability of LNG forces the government to develop emergency response plans.

Prime Minister Takaichi said expanded coal usage, combined with restarted nuclear plants, would offset about 40% of the LNG imports Japan previously received through the Strait of Hormuz. By simply letting older coal plants operate without political handicaps, METI projects a massive savings of 500,000 tons of LNG over the fiscal year.

Japan’s thousands of factories, chemical plants, and data centers cannot pause for the cloudy or windless days that make solar and wind energy so unreliable, and dependency on imports leaves no margin for experimentation.

Taken together, the decisions supporting use of oil, gas, and coal exhibit an unwavering commitment to proven, reliable energy sources. Japan is refusing to sacrifice security for climate diplomacy.

The Japanese people have a legacy of resilience, engineering brilliance, and industrial mastery. Today, the country stands firm against climate dogma to secure its industrial future with the hydrocarbons that built its greatness in the first place.

Originally published at Townhall, July 11th, 2026.

Vijay Jayaraj is a Science and Research Associate at the CO2 Coalition, Fairfax, Virginia. He holds an M.S. in environmental sciences from the University of East Anglia and a postgraduate degree in energy management from Robert Gordon University, both in the U.K., and a bachelor’s in engineering from Anna University, India. He served as a research associate with the Changing Oceans Research Unit at University of British Columbia, Canada.

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23 Comments
strativarius
July 16, 2026 6:32 am

The Japanese also have a wicked sense of [dark] humour. They can see the hilarity in this…

Britain’s biggest community solar project has been forced to shut for the duration of its first summer by the government’s energy system operator to avoid overloading the local grid with renewable energy.

The shutdown is expected to cost the cooperative scheme’s nearly 10,000 members about £2m in lost revenue before it is allowed to restart again in September.Graun

Get used to it…
The timing of the shutdown at the beginning of its first summer “could not be worse”

(Neso) is understood to have ordered National Grid to shut a vital “super grid transformer” over the summer to prevent the rooftop solar in the area from driving the transmission network’s voltage beyond its safety limits. The surge in rooftop solar power is particularly difficult to manage during the summer when long, sunny days lead to more generation than a local grid might need. Specialist equipment can help to manage potential voltage issues, but these upgrades have not yet taken place 

What a chaotic mess.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
Reply to  strativarius
July 16, 2026 7:52 am

The whole “renewable energy transition” seems like it was planned by activists instead of engineers. It’s either too much or too little electricity being generated and those that invested in the scheme did so under guaranteed pricing so they can’t lose, and they don’t care.

GeorgeInSanDiego
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 16, 2026 8:16 am

It was planned in large part by people with law or liberal arts degrees who I would not trust to run a chippy; much less an electrical grid, arguably the most complex system ever devised.

Bryan A
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 16, 2026 11:42 am

This is because it was designed and implemented to keep activists happy and inactive instead of being designed to meet market demands.

Gregg Eshelman
Reply to  strativarius
July 17, 2026 12:50 am

Has the UK got ’round to installing the much larger power cables to Orkney? https://youtu.be/8UmsfXWzvEA

4 years ago the Orkney Islands had far more wind generated electricity than they could ever use, and a garden hose of a power connection to the big island so it was impossible to get more than a fraction of that capacity off the islands.

Reply to  strativarius
July 17, 2026 10:14 am

PM Takaichi has learned the lesson that California is teaching. If you produce more solar power than your customers need, you must either have massive storage or a large grid which can accept the extra production. California dumps its excess power to the grid (at a premium cost.) California also uses the grid to buy power (at a premium cost) when California needs it between 4 PM and 9 PM. California shut down many power plants because of renewables (😂🤣😅). Thus means that the state imports 25 to 30% of the power used in the state. This explains why our electricity costs $0.35 per KWh.

Japan does not have massive grid connections like California does. Japan needs domestic dispatchable power for 100% of their peak demand. Takaichi is doing what makes economic sense. This means that unlike California, Japan wants to keep electricity affordable for its citizens.

cartoss
July 16, 2026 6:41 am

So, Japan – Turns out that Whirligigs and Fields of glass don’t work, not even with Unicorn farts and a sprinkling of Faerie Dust.

Bruce Cobb
July 16, 2026 7:44 am

Uh-ohs, this could be a problem for them at COP31 in Antalya, Turkey. Prolly should skip it.

Mr.
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 16, 2026 10:10 am

C’mon Bruce.
Do you realize how much extra $$$s those “escorts” that follow the CoPs are gonna charge if they have to work up a sweat to perform their duties?

If it gets > 30C, they’ll probably all be wearing portable AirCon units instead of back-packs.
Low emissions ones of course.

(I think I’d better stop with this line of discourse right now 🙂 )

Bryan A
Reply to  Mr.
July 16, 2026 11:46 am

Perhaps it should be Demanded that All COPs are run exclusively by renewables (no grid Inter tie and no diesel back-up) and without Air Conditioning!
#Defund the COPs!

mleskovarsocalrrcom
July 16, 2026 7:57 am

Japan’s economy hasn’t done well in decades. Without industry their society would collapse entirely. I’m surprised it took them this long to figure it out.

Sparta Nova 4
July 16, 2026 8:02 am

There are reports and posts of how the Straights of Hormuz are spurring more rapid transitions to “renewable energy” and EVs.

Obviously Japan is offering substantial proof of that claim.

/sarc as if it is needed.

strativarius
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
July 16, 2026 8:54 am

Straights of Hormuz 

Homophobe!

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  strativarius
July 16, 2026 1:03 pm

You could have marked that as humor, and you probably should have.
Yes, I picked the wrong spelling. Straits. Sheesh.

Phillip Chalmers
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
July 16, 2026 8:28 pm

Just one Strait = Strait of Hormuz

Scissor
Reply to  strativarius
July 16, 2026 4:24 pm

I learned a new word. I don’t think I want to try it.

Dave Andrews
July 16, 2026 8:34 am

No surprises here then. Reliable energy is a must for all countries and as the Energy Institute’s ‘2026 Statistical Review of World Energy’ notes in 2025

“Fossil Fuels continued to expand in absolute terms and retained their dominant position accounting for 86% of Total Energy Supply (TES)”

“Middle East still dominates oil production but others scaled up. China, the US and West Africa were the largest contributors to growth in absolute terms accounting for 35%, 19% and 6% of global increase respectively”

However the “Strongest increase in oil production growth was in South and Central America, specifically, Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela and Guyana”

“In oil refining the Asia – Pacific region had the largest share in both capacity (36,6%) and throughput (37.3%) mainly driven by China and India”

“Total LNG exports worldwide in 2025 were 578.5 billion cubic metres (bcm) compared to 545bcm in 2024”

“Total world coal production in 2025 was 9052.7 million tonnes, slightly down on 2024’s 9057 million tonnes”

Ronald Stein
July 16, 2026 8:52 am

Wind turbines and solar panels can ONLY generate electricity occasionally but CANNOT make any products or transportation fuels for the 8 billion on this planet.

Worldwide economies run on continuous and uninterruptable electricity AND transportation fuels. Jet fuel for the military and international airports, diesel fuel for trucks and construction equipment, different grades of gasoline for vehicles, and bunker fuel for all the ships arriving and departing from Ports.
 
 

Reply to  Ronald Stein
July 16, 2026 1:18 pm

You forgot diesel fuel for trains…

Bryan A
July 16, 2026 11:40 am

Japan chooses thought over sheepleing

Edward Katz
July 16, 2026 2:09 pm

Like a number of Asian nations, Japan gave the Net Zero quest a try and found it unrealistic and largely unattainable. So it cut the nonsense about saving the planet from runaway rising temperatures from excessive fossil fuel use and went back to what’s realistic and reliable; namely, fossil fuels. In much of the rest of the world, the clean energy pipe dream still exists and too many governments who are overly influenced by the environmentalists haven’t the resolve to give up the hope that renewable energies can somehow supplant coal, oil and natural gas. Meanwhile it’s the consumers who wind up paying the price with higher taxes and overall living costs due to green subsidies and mandates.

Bob
July 16, 2026 5:30 pm

Reality biting you in the butt isn’t a bad thing, now they know what not to do.

July 17, 2026 6:26 am

I believe the proportion of total energy use for fossil fuels was down 1% over the last 30 years, but it was down on a percentage basis of a larger total, so it is still INCREASING.

And in the last 30 years we have squandered HOW MANY $Trillions on worse-than-useless wind and solar?

Which does nothing more than pay the rent seekers. There is no “energy transition” nor will there ever be one.