Posted by admin on 04 1st, 2010 | no responses

Tokyo launches Asia’s first carbon emissions trade scheme

by Agence France-Presse Tokyo. Photo courtesy hide99 via FlickrTOKYO — The city of Tokyo on Thursday launched Asia’s first scheme to trade carbon credits, aiming to lead Japan in the battle against greenhouse gas emissions blamed for climate change. The mega-city of 13 million mandated that the 1,400 top-polluting factories and office buildings reduce emissions, with the aim of slashing Tokyo’s total output of carbon dioxide by 25 percent from 2000 levels by 2020. “We want to be a model for the Japanese government,” Yuki Arata, the director for emissions trading at the Tokyo metropolitan government’s environment bureau, told AFP. Japan, Asia’s biggest economy, has pledged to cut greenhouse emissions by 25 percent by 2020 from 1990 levels, provided other major emitters also make sharp reductions, one of the most ambitious targets of any industrialized country. In Tokyo, in the shorter term, the businesses will have to cut carbon dioxide emissions by six percent during the 2010-2014 period compared to their average emissions of recent years. Under the scheme starting in 2011, companies that cannot meet the target will have to buy “right-to-pollute” credits from those that can, or will face fines and the bad publicity of having their names published. To meet their targets, businesses can cut emissions through greater energy efficiency and by using renewable energy sources. Tokyo’s Governor Shintaro Ishihara, known for his strong nationalist and ecological ideas, led the city’s unsuccessful bid to host a green 2016 Olympic Games, which he promised “would save planet Earth.” Rio de Janeiro beat Tokyo, Chicago, and Madrid to host the Games. Related Links: Everything you need to know about Obama’s new fuel-economy rules What to make of the Pollan/Schlosser agreement with Wendy’s? Senate climate bill to fund Utah tar sands development

Continue reading here:
Tokyo launches Asia’s first carbon emissions trade scheme

More on SKCEA.org:

  • The Yes Men send an intern to the Bolivia Climate Summit
    by Jonathan Hiskes Prankster duo the The Yes Men sent an intern to the "people's" climate summit in Bolivia last month, and he made a pretty entertaining video. The alternative conference, led by Bolivian President Evo Morales , skewed toward the global down-with-capitalism crowd...
  • Brits mad, and worried, about BP bashing
    by Ben Tuxworth. While it's definitely not a diplomatic incident, and of course Americans don't just think of BP as a British company, the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has the British media transfixed. The Daily Mail has in recent days cranked up the anti-American sentiment, ...
  • Boehner bombs: House speaker fails on transportation bill
    By Greg...
  • Fusion Power Update – Getting Closer!
    Researchers at Sandia Laboratories are getting closer to nuclear fusion that will produce more energy than it takes to create the fusion reaction! They are very close to the break even point. Magnetically imploded tubes called liners, intended to help produce controlled nuclear f...
  • How science can predict where you stand on Keystone XL
    MCLA On Feb. 17, more than 40,000 climate change activists — many of them quite young — rallied in Washington, D.C., to oppose the Keystone XL pipeline, which will transport dirty tar-sands oil from Canada across the heartland. The scornful response from media centri...

Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word