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Climate change: Is ‘blue hydrogen’ Japan’s answer to coal? By Rupert Wingfield-Hayes BBC News, Tokyo December 6, 2021
Activists looking out over Tokyo Bay at a new coal-fired power station under construction It's a glorious autumn afternoon and I'm standing on a hillside looking out over Tokyo Bay. Beside me is Takao Saiki, a usually mild-mannered gentleman in his 70s. But today Saiki-San is angry. "It's a total joke," he says, in perfect English. "Just ridiculous!" The cause of his distress is a giant construction site blocking our view across the bay - a 1.3-gigawatt coal-fired power station in the making. "I don't understand why we still have to burn coal to generate electricity," says SaikiSan's friend, Rikuro Suzuki. "This plant alone will emit more than seven million tonnes of carbon dioxide every year!"
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