Japan’s 2nd-Largest Utility Trials Blockchain for Renewable Energy Credits
Japan'south 2nd-Largest Utility Trials Blockchain for Renewable Energy Credits
The second-largest power utility in Nippon is extending its trial of a blockchain-powered system for transacting renewable energy credits.
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The 2d-largest ability utility in Nippon is extending its trial of a blockchain-powered system for transacting renewable energy credits.
According to a press release shared with Cointelegraph on Dec. ix, the Kansai Electric Power Co Inc (KEPCO) is extending its trial of a blockchain-enabled renewable energy trading platform developed by Australian tech firm Power Ledger.
Decentralizing, decarbonizing
In 2018, Nihon was the world's fifth-largest consumer of electricity, yet produced just 17.v% of its energy from renewable sources.
In May of this year, the country's Ministry building of Economy, Merchandise and Industry decided to continue its sale of non-fossil fuel value certificates (NFVs). These provide free energy retailers with proof that the portion of energy under the certificate is generated from renewable energy sources.
They tin also be used to assess which power plants are contributing the most ecology value in order to encourage investment in green industries and can be traded, similarly to other forms of renewable free energy certificates (RECs).
A local written report from EKOenergy in March claimed that existing energy certificates and carbon credit systems in Japan remained "complicated and fragmented at best."
Nether the terms of the new agreement, KEPCO will use Power Ledger to create, rail, trade and settle NVAs that are generated by rooftop solar systems.
The system uses blockchain applied science's immutable and decentralized properties to track certificates throughout their lifecycle, thereby reducing the potential for duplicate use. Power Ledger generates REC tokens, which are stored in a centralized KEPCO wallet.
An initial successful trial between KEPCO and power Ledger had reportedly demonstrated that allowing free energy producers to trade their surplus free energy via the platform was an efficient way for them to monetize their renewable energy investments. This ostensibly helps to provide consumers with lower-toll green free energy sources.
The new trial will enable KEPCO clients to employ their NFVs against claims by the RE100 — a global initiative led by The Climate Group non-profit organization in cooperation with the global carbon disclosure network CDP. The initiative accepts NFV certificates provided they have tracking information from governments.
The trial is scheduled to embark in Dec, with results expected in March 2020.
Previous REC blockchain initiatives
In June of this year, South Korea's largest ability provider, Korea Electric Power Corporation, signed a contract with two domestic ability suppliers to found a blockchain-powered organisation for transacting RECs.
The corporation had also announced in fall 2018 that it would be using blockchain and other innovative energy solutions to develop its next-generation microgrid.
Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/japans-2nd-largest-utility-trials-blockchain-for-renewable-energy-credits
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