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Viewing cable 09OSAKAKOBE84, Kansai Wind Power: A Breath of Fresh Innovation

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09OSAKAKOBE84 2009-05-14 04:03 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Consulate Osaka Kobe
VZCZCXRO4007
OO RUEHAST RUEHDH RUEHHM RUEHLN RUEHMA RUEHPB RUEHPOD RUEHTM RUEHTRO
DE RUEHOK #0084/01 1340403
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 140403Z MAY 09
FM AMCONSUL OSAKA KOBE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 1383
INFO RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO PRIORITY 8505
RUEHKSO/AMCONSUL SAPPORO PRIORITY 0267
RUEHNAG/AMCONSUL NAGOYA PRIORITY 2396
RUEHFK/AMCONSUL FUKUOKA PRIORITY 0259
RUEHNH/AMCONSUL NAHA PRIORITY 0287
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 0453
RUEHUL/AMEMBASSY SEOUL 1157
RUEHRL/AMEMBASSY BERLIN 0001
RUEHSH/AMCONSUL SHENYANG 0074
RUEHGH/AMCONSUL SHANGHAI 0044
RUEHGZ/AMCONSUL GUANGZHOU 0020
RUEHHK/AMCONSUL HONG KONG 0215
RUEHFT/AMCONSUL FRANKFURT 0016
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RHEBAAA/DEPT OF ENERGY WASHINGTON DC
RUEHZN/ENVIRONMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 OSAKA KOBE 000084 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
SIPDIS 
 
COMMERCE FOR ITA BRICKMAN AND SANTILLO 
 
DOE FOR PI BISCONTI AND EE CHALK AND KIMBIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: BEXP EINV ENRG ECON JA
SUBJECT: Kansai Wind Power: A Breath of Fresh Innovation 
 
REF: Tokyo 596 
 
OSAKA KOBE 00000084  001.2 OF 004 
 
 
1.  (SBU) Summary: Unlike the GOJ's recently announced 
feed-in-tariff (FIT) policy favoring solar power (reftel) 
and aggressive goals to raise Japan's solar power 
production capacity forty-fold by 2030, Japanese 
officials have established much more modest goals for 
increasing wind power production.  Citing problems with 
fluctuations in output and frequency, Japan's nine 
regional electric power companies, which operate 
essentially independent power grids, have not greatly 
encouraged the integration of commercial alternative 
power sources such as wind and solar.  Japanese experts 
differ about wind power's efficacy in Japan, and the 
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry director of 
electricity infrastructure recently announced that Japan 
is close to reaching the limit for introducing wind power. 
Hiroyuki Kamata, President of Clean Energy Factory Co., 
Ltd., a developer and operator of wind-power generation 
plants, is unconcerned.  Kamata is confident that even 
without changes to the current power grid or regulatory 
structure, his company's innovative business model sets 
it up for success and rapid expansion and the positioning 
of General Electric wind turbines at sixty sites 
throughout Japan.  End Summary. 
 
-------------------- 
Clean Energy Factory 
-------------------- 
2.  (SBU) Established in November 2000, Clean Energy 
Factory Co., Ltd. (CEF) is a Hokkaido-based developer and 
operator of wind-power generation plants. Since the 
company completed its first wind-power project in October 
2001, a single windmill powering a GE turbine with 
electricity generation capacity of 1500 kilowatts per 
hour (kph), 
CEF has since expanded to 120 employees and placed more 
than 80 windmills at wind farms in Hokkaido, Oita, 
Shizuoka, Yamaguchi, Wakayama and Hyogo Prefectures, with 
plans to establish operations at a total of sixty sites 
throughout Japan. 
 
3.  (SBU) We met with CEF President Hiroyuki Kamata and 
visited CEF's Minami-Awajijima site in Hyogo Prefecture, 
the largest wind farm in Kansai with 15 GE turbines. 
Each windmill stands approximately 100 meters high, has 
three 37 -meter long blades and generates up to 2.5 
megawatts of electricity.  The site has a total 
generating capacity of 37.5 megawatts.  Kamata told us it 
will take 10-12 years for CEF to recover its investment 
costs and that the average cost of energy production per 
watt over that period will be 12 yen, about one-third of 
the current cost for solar energy production.  To 
increase the returns on investment from the facility, the 
company aims to extend the estimated life span of the 
windmills to 20-25 years. CEF's onsite maintenance staff 
carefully monitors the windmills in conjunction with 24/7 
remote monitoring from company headquarters in Hokkaido 
as well as from a GE affiliated company in Germany.  The 
onsite maintenance staff is primarily made up of former 
self-defense force members, capable of scaling and 
working within the 100 meter high windmill towers and 
comfortable living and working in extreme and remote 
environments. 
 
--------------------------------------------- -- 
Business Model Exploits RPS Production Benefits 
--------------------------------------------- -- 
4. (SBU) Under Japan's Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) 
that came into effect in April 2003, CEF, as a purveyor 
 
OSAKA KOBE 00000084  002.2 OF 004 
 
 
of renewable energy, receives approximately 1.7 times the 
standard electricity rate from power companies for its 
wind generated power, says Kamata.  Starting with the 
fixed cost of 12 yen per watt of energy produced, the RPS 
and strict regulatory structure of the Japanese power 
industry make it possible for CEF to calculate and 
guarantee a relatively certain rate of return on 
investment.  As a consequence, it has been relatively 
easy for Kamata to convince his investors from GE, AIG, 
JASCO, and Nomura to support CEF's expansion.  Adds 
Kamata, Kansai Electric Power Company (KEPCO), which buys 
the electricity generated at CEF's Minami Awajima site, 
is not currently meeting its minimum alternative energy 
purchase requirements under the RPS, and therefore CEF 
wants to add more windmills at the site to benefit from 
sales to fill the unused amounts. 
 
--------------------------- 
Plans for Further Expansion 
--------------------------- 
5. (SBU) CEF has secured contract rights from Japan's 
regional electric power companies to connect to their 
power grids at sixty sites near areas where CEF has 
conducted wind surveys and identified viable sites for 
developing more wind farms.  (Note: CEF sold wind farms 
in Shiratakiyama, near Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi Prefecture 
and in Shirama, Wakayama Prefecture in late March 2009 to 
Osaka-based Kinden Corporation.  End Note.) 
 
6. (SBU) The logistical costs for transporting the 
enormous GE turbines and blades built in Germany to CEF's 
wind farms in Japan is incredibly expensive, 
approximately USD 2 million in transportation and permit 
fees for delivery of each windmill from port to site, 
says Kamata.  With the goal of reducing its logistical 
costs, CEF has agreed to purchase a new but unwanted 
expansion project at the Maizuru, Kyoto commercial port 
scheduled for completion in March 2010.  When asked why 
Maizuru, Kamata replied, "Because it is inexpensive and 
happens to be located in the middle of where we plan to 
expand." 
 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
Tomen, U.S. MBA and Hokkaido Impetus for Innovation 
--------------------------------------------- ------ 
7. (SBU) Kamata and several other key members of CEF are 
alumni of Tomen Corporation.  In 2006, Tomen became a 
subsidiary of Toyota's Trading Company, but it was 
originally incorporated in 1920 as Toyo Menka Kaisha Ltd. 
(Oriental Cotton Trading). Tomen was once Japan's seventh 
largest general trading company, 17th largest company 
overall, and the world's 40th largest firm in terms of 
sales volume. It was while working in Tomen's machinery 
and energy power generation area that Kamata first worked 
with GE, CEF's exclusive source for its wind turbines. 
 
8. (SBU) In the late 1990's just prior to Kamata's 
departure from Tomen to pursue an MBA at New York 
University's Stern School of Business, Tomen tried, 
ultimately unsuccessfully he says, to restructure itself 
into more of an Anglo-American-style company, with the 
goal of maximizing shareholder value.  This effort and 
the eventual collapse of Tomen made a significant 
impression on Kamata. As a result, CEF's international 
entrepreneurial spirit is readily apparent in its 
innovative business model, vision and hiring practices. 
 
9. (SBU) While at Stern, Kamata first began to think 
about introducing wind power to his home area of Hokkaido. 
Having grown up in an area of Hokkaido with nearly 
 
OSAKA KOBE 00000084  003.2 OF 004 
 
 
constant winds, it made him laugh, Kamata says, when 
Japanese experts told him that Hokkaido's winds were 
neither consistent nor strong enough to support wind 
farms.  Convinced that the scientists did not understand 
the wind requirements needed for the successful operation 
of modern GE wind-powered turbines, CEF established its 
own criteria and conducted its own wind surveys and that 
led to the identification of the sixty sites throughout 
Japan that CEF has prioritized for development. 
 
-------------------------------------------- 
No Need for Energy Regulatory Schemes Reform 
-------------------------------------------- 
10. (SBU) Wind power and other alternative energy 
networks operate independently of, but must feed into the 
power grids operated by Japan's nine regional electric 
power companies.  Kamata agreed that some aspects of the 
current regulatory structure make it difficult for CEF 
and other alternative energy producers to operate at 
highest efficiency.  At the Minami-Awajijima site, for 
example, CEF sells its power to KEPCO, but must also get 
approval from Shikoku's power provider.  Another 
regulation, noted Kamata, requires all energy providers 
to notify power companies of the precise rate of electric 
current they will supply to the power grid, broken down 
into 30 minute time blocks, 24 hours in advance of 
delivery.  It is not easy for wind and solar power 
producers to meet this requirement due to uncontrollable 
shifts in weather patterns.  As a consequence of the 
requirement, CEF must closely track weather patterns and 
must underbid its supply commitments by a safe margin. 
The net result is that CEF usually provides extra 
electricity at no fee to the power companies. 
 
11. (SBU) Kamata told us that the use of batteries to 
store wind-generated electricity is not yet cost 
effective.  Given the current quality of sodium-sulfide 
batteries, electricity lost during transfers to and from 
battery storage is approximately 30-35 percent.  With 
careful monitoring of the weather, CEF can consistently 
and safely underbid its supply commitment by only 10 
percent, thereby beating by 20-25 percent the amounts 
lost during battery storage and without the additional, 
substantial costs of the batteries.  CEF is considering, 
however, adapting the use of capacitors to exploit the 
20-30 minutes it takes to charge the capacitors as a 
quasi-storage medium and way to smooth the flow of its 
wind generated current onto the grid. 
 
----------------------------------------- 
No FIT, OK, but a Tax Code Change Welcome 
----------------------------------------- 
12. (SBU) With regard to the possibility that the recent 
FIT legislation increasing rates for solar power 
generation might be expanded and made applicable to wind 
and other alternative energy sources, Kamata wryly notes 
that the Ministry of Environment and METI have said they 
are "considering" it, which means "no" in Japan.  More 
than a change to energy policy or regulations, CEF would 
like to see the central government modify the tax code 
with regard to depreciation on fixed assets.  CEF has 
lost money the last three years because of the way taxes 
on its fixed asset assets are calculated. This is a tough 
sell though, acknowledges Kamata, because all companies 
with significant fixed assets want these rules to change 
and yet, nobody in the central government wants to 
support the change. 
 
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Noise and Visual Pollution 
 
OSAKA KOBE 00000084  004.2 OF 004 
 
 
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13. (SBU) Beyond power company concerns with unstable 
power flows entering their power grids, opponents of wind 
power raise noise and visual pollution as downsides of 
wind farms. Kamata acknowledges that in close proximity, 
the turbines running at full speed are quite loud.  For 
this reason, CEF has targeted steep, unwanted, lightly 
inhabited areas as the sites of its wind farms. CEF's 
Minami-Awajijima site is located, for example, on the 
hills above the site of bankrupt golf resort. One of 
CEF's wind farms in Yamaguchi Prefecture is located on 
the site of a bankrupt pear orchard cooperative.  In part 
to engender goodwill and local acceptance of the wind 
farm, CEF created a subsidiary, Houhoku Pear Farm Co., 
Ltd sharing profits with local farmers so that they could 
continue to earn a living farming pears.  Wind turbines, 
he adds, can be seen as beautiful when viewed within the 
context of clean energy as a replacement for fossil-fuel 
based power production. 
 
14. (SBU) CEF's need to position its windmills in remote 
hillside locations created a new business opportunity. 
Under its subsidiary, CEF Logistics, Co., Ltd., CEF 
licenses for use in Japan, an unusual crane technology 
from Germany's Liebherr Company.  In comparison to 
standard construction cranes, the Liebherr crane can 
operate on narrower, steeper roads thereby reducing the 
length, width and therefore the cost of building access 
roads in the remote locations where CEF places windmills. 
The Governor of Shiga Prefecture, among others, has 
expressed interest in adapting the CEF crane technology 
for use in harvesting lumber in rural, mountainous 
regions of the prefecture. 
 
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Bird Strikes and Safety Issues 
------------------------------ 
15. (SBU) In some areas of Japan, the threat of wind 
farms to local and migratory birds has been raised. 
While usually fatal to the birds involved, bird strikes 
are unusual occurrences and structural damage to 
windmills as a result of bird strikes is rarer still, 
responds Kamata. There have been only five confirmed bird 
strikes, he says, among the approximately 2500 wind 
turbines currently in operation in Japan. CEF has 
recorded two bird strikes, both at sites in Hokkaido 
where, Kamata notes, the number of birds is much higher 
than in the rest of Japan. 
 
16. (SBU) Lightning strikes and high winds pose a greater 
structural risk to the windmills. Although the windmills 
can withstand gusts of 198 kph (125 mph), CEF stops 
operations if the wind speed exceeds 90 kph (55 mph) to 
avoid damage to the blades and turbines.  The blades can 
be remotely stopped and rotated to avoid catching the 
wind, but in April 2008, two of ten windmills at CEF's 
wind farm in Shizuoka lost one blade each in winds 
gusting to nearly 110 mph. 
 
DONG