Japan: Electricity Shortages Could Last for Months

March 15th, 2011

The electricity generation question is the one I’m most curious about. How does Japan keep-the-lights-on, so to speak, going forward?

Implications of Japanese Earthquake

Via: Reuters:

Japan’s earthquake has left a gaping hole in the nation’s power capacity that looks set to last months, threatening to make economic recovery far more feeble than hoped.

The first rolling power cuts in the history of the giant Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) have already closed many plants, with Toyota shutting down until at least Wednesday.

Rolling three-hour blackouts have wrecked the clockwork precision of Japan’s railways while a thousand schools across Tokyo cancelled classes. Even Tokyo’s ubiquitous neon signs have gone dark, a big blow to confidence in a country that lives by routine and order.

With a new explosion at a nuclear plant in Fukushima threatening a far more serious radiation leak, the power shortage will not get better anytime soon.

“It looks like Japan could be in a “power down” state for a protracted period,” said Stephen Roberts, Nomura’s chief economist for Australia. “That’s what makes it different from other major quakes.”

“People tend to compare it to Kobe and assume a “v”-shaped recovery, but Kobe never caused this level of power disruption,” he added. “It means any proper recovery could be delayed right out to the fourth quarter.”

There is certainly still plenty of unused manufacturing capacity in Japan, but far less when it comes to power supply.

Analysts at Australian investment bank Macquarie estimated the earthquake and resulting tsunami took a quarter of TEPCO’s total capacity of 65 gigawatts, shared between nuclear and oil.

In all some 15 nuclear plants were shut down, and it was not clear how many would re-start or when.

“We think power supply shortages and rations are likely to continue in TEPCO’s supply area for months rather than weeks,” the analysts wrote in a note to clients.

And the growing crisis at the Fukushima plant brings into question Japan’s whole experiment with nuclear power, which provides about one-third of total generating capacity.

Nomura’s Stephens said there was perhaps scope to ramp up power output at some of Japan’s oil and coal plants, though at great extra cost. Japan’s increased demand for coal, oil and LNG for generation would also add to upward pressure on resource prices and so to inflation risks elsewhere in Asia.

But even then it was unlikely to be enough to make up the current shortfall in power.

“If this lasts to the summer, which is more than possible, there is no way the system could supply the power for air conditioning,” he warned. “Tokyo in summer, without air con? Doesn’t bear thinking about.”

2 Responses to “Japan: Electricity Shortages Could Last for Months”

  1. Eileen says:

    Myself and my mother’s caregiver’s ran a mini-hospital here at home for ten years. And my worst nightmare was the power going out for an extended time. In addition to the basics that require electricity: fan for natural gas furnace, well pump, lights, etc., we needed several electrical devices to maintain Mom’s care. The nebulizer for breathing treatments, and oxygen generator at night. I insisted on keeping the thermostat in the house at 72 degrees. We used a lot of electricty for her care.
    In any case, my worst nightmare was that the power would go out. It did several times.
    After years of having to worry in that regard and reading that it may be a power down situation in Japan for some time here on Cryptogon, and that I read this article on Solari today:
    http://www.larsschall.com/2011/03/12/%E2%80%9Cwe-are-in-the-midst-of-an-epochal-tectonic-shift%E2%80%9D/
    “Their absorbing passion in this meeting that they had in New York at the Rockefeller University was: How do we stop global population growth over the next several decades? (vi) So that will give you an idea.”
    I don’t know whether people in Japan are under the same electrical dependency for health care as we are in the U.S., But right about now if I were living in Japan and had to care for my Mom, I’d be losing it. Big time. And then I’d go on.
    Just an anecdote for anyone from Japan reading this, when we decided to stop putting my mother on a ventilator or other electrical means of keeping her alive, she never went into congestive heart failure to the extent that she needed a ventilator again. Go figure.
    But a power down situation for an extended period of time? And from my experience with Mom?
    Whether planned or not, these events in Japan will result, and quoting Charles Dickens character Scrooge from “A Christmas Carol,”this will reduce the surplus population.”
    Hold fast and strong as ye go into the night dear ones. It think this is just the beginning of woes to ourselves and fellow humankind who do not take steps to Power Down.
    Blessings to your efforts to substain and go forward.

  2. tochigi says:

    the rolling blackouts here are indiscriminate: hospitals, traffic lights, the lot. the dialysis patients and people on respirators are in big trouble.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.