Sitemap

This Japanese Start-Up Has Designed A Wind Turbine That Can Work In Typhoons

CorD Recommends

Miroslav Lajčak Appointed New EU Ambassador to Switzerland

Miroslav Lajčak, formerly the Special Representative for...

1938 Superman Comic Sold for Record $6 Million

A 1938 comic book featuring the first...

White House Calls for Lunar Time Zone

The White House has requested that NASA...

Chinese President Xi Jinping to Embark on Official Visit to Serbia

The press office of Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic announced that Chinese President Xi Jinping will be visiting Serbia on...

Global Debt Reaches Historic Highs, WEF President Warns

Børge Brende, President of the World Economic Forum (WEF), delivered a stark assessment of the global economy at the...

High-Speed Rail Link Between Novi Sad and Budapest Set to Start in Decembar 

The main track on the high-speed rail section from Novi Sad to Budapest has been successfully connected at the...

Miele Opens First Experience Centre in Novi Sad Amid 125th Anniversary Celebrations

In a year marking its 125th anniversary, Miele has inaugurated its first Experience Centre in Novi Sad, enhancing its...

Nelt Group Announces Executive Appointments

Nelt Group has introduced significant organisational changes to bolster its business strategy "Accelerate 2025," appointing Goran Cerovina as Executive...

As governments and companies globally rush to install as much renewable energy capacity as possible to cut carbon emissions, areas often not suitable for solar arrays or wind farms are opening up for development with advances in technology.

In Japan, a start-up called Challenergy has designed a wind turbine that works in cyclonic conditions, which typically shut down most wind installations, turning them into a potential energy source.

While renewables in general are the fastest growing source of electricity generation globally, in Japan most new renewables capacity has been powered by the sun. Only in recent years has the government started trying to promote wind, especially offshore wind.

But with Japan experiencing on average 26 typhoons and tropical storms a year, and with meteorologists saying they are getting more frequent and more powerful with climate change, the path to development of wind power is generally viewed as tough.

“One of our goals is to turn typhoons into a strength,” said Atsushi Shimizu, who founded Challenergy three years after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster sent him on a quest to find a sustainable source of energy.

“If we can just partially leverage the vast energy brought by typhoons, we can consider typhoons not just as disasters, but as a source of energy,” he told Reuters during an online demonstration of the turbines.

Read more...

Japan’s Nidec Announces €1.5 bln Serbia Electric Motor Hub Plan

Nidec Corporation officially announced its decision to open a new European production hub in the city of Novi Sad in the Republic of Serbia....

Japan Marks A Decade Since Fukushima Nuclear Disaster

Environmental groups have said the effort to decommission the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant is hopeless. Some local residents fear it's not safe to return...

Conventional wind turbines have giant propeller-like blades that are growing more vulnerable in cyclonic conditions as they get bigger with technological advances. Challenergy’s “Magnus Vertical Axis Wind Turbine” has ditched pointed blades, with their giant sweeping revolutions, for upright square ones that spin on a horizontal axis to the direction of the wind, which helps to more directly capture its energy and makes the structure sturdier.

In August, the company started a demonstration of a 10-kilowatt tower in Batanes, Philippines, and is aiming to incorporate solar power generation and storage batteries to provide more stable supplies of electricity in the area in the future.

Source: Reuters, weforum.org, Photo: REUTERS/Yves Herman

Related Articles

Imperial Instagram Debut as Japanese Monarchy Embraces Social Media

In a digital rite of passage, the Japanese Imperial Family has gracefully navigated its way into the realm of social media, unveiling an Instagram...

Successful Japanese Culinary Workshop Held in Belgrade

The Japanese Embassy, in collaboration with Go Sushi Ušće, hosted a Japanese food workshop in Belgrade, attracting culinary enthusiasts keen on mastering the art...

Japan’s Generous Health Sector Aid to Serbia Strengthens Bonds

In a display of enduring friendship and solidarity, the Japanese Embassy in Serbia, led by Ambassador Akira Imamura, has announced a significant donation to...

Japanese Embassy Hosts Ceremonial Reception for Emperor Naruhito’s Birthday

The Embassy of Japan in Belgrade held a ceremonial reception to celebrate the birthday of the Emperor of Japan, Naruhito, at the Metropol Hotel...

National Day of Japan marked in Belgrade

The Embassy of Japan in Belgrade held a ceremonial reception to celebrate the birthday of the Emperor of Japan, Naruhito, at the Metropol Hotel...

India Set to Overtake Japan and Germany, Eyeing Third Spot in Global Economy by 2027

India is poised for a monumental economic leap, projected to surpass Japan and Germany to claim the title of the world's third-largest economy by...

H.E. Akira Imamura, Ambassador of Japan to Serbia

Farewell “Japanac”

The 93 yellow buses that were donated by Japan to the City of Belgrade in 2003, and which are affectionately referred to as “Japanac”...

Bilateral Trade & Investment

Serbia Attracts Japanese Giants

The distance of more than 9,000 kilometres separating Belgrade and Tokyo certainly represents one of the key reasons why the trade exchange between the...