Research institution Wood Mackenzie introduced in detail Japan's grid-scale energy storage market reform based on data from the Global Energy Data Center, and analyzed the Japanese power market cost dynamics and pricing, supply and demand patterns, emissions, market structure and other contents.
What is Japan's energy storage policy?
As policy, technology, and decarbonization goals converge, Japan is positioning energy storage as a critical link between its climate targets and energy reliability. Japan's energy storage policy is anchored by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), which outlined its ambitions in the 6th Strategic Energy Plan, adopted in 2021.
The $593 million worth of commercial energy storage systems recorded in Japan in 2023 could balloon to $4.15 billion by 2030, InfoLink reckons, with “industrial adoption expected to scale faster,” according to the data company.
Japan's energy storage landscape is shifting, pushed by household demand, corporate ESG mandates, and domestic battery manufacturing. The residential lithium-ion market, projected to grow at a CAGR of 33.9% through 2030, remains one of the fastest-expanding segments.
What is Japan's Energy Strategy?
Japan's energy strategy is evolving, balancing its internal energy needs with a strategic, flexible approach to global market shifts, highlighting the complexity and adaptability required as it redefines its role in energy transitions.
Why should Japan invest in renewables?
The vast potential of renewables would enhance Japan's energy stability and reshape its energy landscape. Investing in domestic renewable manufacturing could reduce import dependency and create high-quality jobs in rural regions with abundant renewable resources.
It also introduces a new target for hydrogen/ammonia-fired power at about 1 per cent, underscoring Japan's push to implement these new energy sources. Nuclear power is slated to provide 20-22 per cent of the energy mix, dependent on reactor restarts under strict safety measures.