Japan to Foster Global Cooperation at the G7
In May 2023, the G7 Summit will be hosted in Hiroshima against the backdrop of a severe global energy crisis and supply chain disruptions that are stoking the fires of inflation, shaking consumer confidence, and threatening the most economically vulnerable in our society. METI will focus on three key policy areas: trade, climate and energy, and digitalization.
METI focuses on three key policy areas: trade, climate and energy, and digitalization
In May 2023, the G7 Summit will be hosted in Hiroshima against the backdrop of a severe global energy crisis and supply chain disruptions that are stoking the fires of inflation, shaking consumer confidence, and threatening the most economically vulnerable in our society.
Climate change, Covid-19, and Russia’s aggression against Ukraine are fueling global concern. In a speech given at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in January, Yasutoshi Nishimura, Japan’s Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry, expressed his alarm, saying “the global shocks that have occurred, one after the other in the span of only a little more than two years, have truly been a wake-up call.”
All three challenges are likely to be high on the agenda at the G7 Summit and relevant ministerial-level meetings to be held throughout the year. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) will take the lead at the ministerial meetings, along with relevant ministries, and aims to drive discussion and policy action in three key areas—trade, climate change and energy, and digitalization.
Revitalizing Global Trade and Investment
Trade is a key policy issue, especially given the rise of serious supply chain disruptions due to Russia’s devastating war in Ukraine.
“Russia’s aggression against Ukraine has shaken the international order, and there are concerns about a global economic slowdown,” said Takuya Kimura, principal director of METI’s Multilateral Trade System Department. “At the G7 meetings, we would like to emphasize the importance of upholding the free and fair economic order.”
Topics will include:
- Promotion of trade and investment
- World Trade Organization reform
- How the G7 will deal with unfair trade practices that distort markets
- Proposals for strengthening economic security
Even if these key issues are addressed, the global economy faces insurmountable hurdles without the existence of healthy trade and investment relationships between nations. METI’s work at the upcoming G7 Summit will include laying the foundation for future progress.
Around the world, shortsighted trade practices could lead to unfair trade. Such practices include forced technology transfer, whereby foreign companies operating in a host nation are required to carry out all processes—from design and development to the manufacturing of advanced technology products—in that nation, possibly forcing companies to share their sensitive technologies with the host nation’s companies.
Nishimura said that we must build a world where “countries will come together based on trust and strengthen their cooperation under the banner of free trade, without slipping into protectionism.”
Climate Change and Energy in Focus
Japan is looking to promote green transformation, or GX, which can rewrite the rules of the prevailing socioeconomic system by inducing transformational changes, without shoehorning emission reductions and economic growth into an either-or relationship.
“Green transformation is a major keyword in Japan,” explained Shinichi Kihara, deputy director general for technology and environment at METI. “The idea is that emissions reduction and economic growth are not in a trade-off relationship. Instead, they can coexist.”
GX will not stop at Japan’s borders, and the government will make efforts to approach countries responsible for major emission outputs while also providing appropriate support to developing nations that are in the process of transitioning to a green regime. Ultimately, Japan seeks to promote GX in all sectors, including energy and industry.
At the same time, the energy crisis has put the spotlight on global energy security. Nishimura believes it is necessary to undertake decarbonization in a way that is fully compatible with ensuring a stable supply of energy, and that it will be important to undertake various and practical pathways that fit the needs and expectations of individual nations.
Japan will make the utmost efforts to promote its clean energy transition, including installing the greatest possible amount of renewable energy facilities and using nuclear plants as much as possible.
Boosting Digitalization
Another major transformation underway is digital transformation, or DX, which has been defined as the creation of new value through innovation made possible by the adoption of digital technology that aims for the creation of a more prosperous society. The role of digitalization as a bulwark against unpredictable events has been highlighted in recent years by global challenges such as the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s aggression against Ukraine.
The free flow of data in the face of arbitrary restrictions and ensuring data integrity are essential if the digitalized world is to operate as intended.
In a move that has garnered positive international feedback, Japan proposed a guiding principle, Data Free Flow with Trust (DFFT), which seeks to enable cross-border free flow of data while addressing privacy, data protection, intellectual property rights, and security concerns. The principle was first suggested by then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at Davos 2019, and later endorsed at the G20 Osaka Summit in June 2019. Since then, the DFFT has been widely accepted as a primary principle for international digital policy coordination in various international forums.
Reaching a global consensus or convergence on the rules that involve privacy and security will take time. The G7, currently under Japanese presidency, is expected to formulate the priorities in operationalizing the DFFT so that countries can work together despite their varied approaches to data governance. Vigorously moving the DFFT into its operational phase, the Japanese government has announced that it will establish an institutional arrangement to promote interoperability across data regimes, implement the priorities that have been identified by the international forum, and advance solutions for cross-border data transfer through public–private cooperation.
It is also important to redesign governance for a digitalized society. DX technologies, such as artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things, and the metaverse, now have the ability to fundamentally reshape the way companies operate and how individuals relate to society.
It is vital to explore new governance options, including involving multiple stakeholders in discussions on how to flexibly update governance systems in response to changes in the operating environment.
International Cooperation Is the Only Way Forward
At the end of the day, the G7 is not just about the interests of advanced industrialized nations, but about building a way forward together with the entire international community.
“In 2023, Japan will host the G7 Summit, and the United States, India, and Indonesia will chair APEC, the G20 Summit and ASEAN, respectively,” Nishimura said. “While working in cooperation to deal with global-level issues, we will lay out for the international community a path forward for building a new economic order.” It will be also essential for Japan to work in coordination with the Global South to tackle various global challenges. “Japan, working within that partnership, is fully determined to fulfill its significant responsibilities.”
Investing in Biotech
To help Japan capture a market forecast to grow to up to $4 trillion by 2040, METI has created an $8 billion fund to support biomanufacturing, a field that encompasses technologies which leverage genetic technology to maximize the ability of microorganisms to produce substances.
From plastics that melt in the sea to cultured foie gras, Japan is pushing innovative technologies forward with government support
A decade on from Dr. Shinya Yamanaka’s win of a Nobel Prize for his research into induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPS cells, Japan is lagging in bringing biotechnology to a market forecast to grow to up to $4 trillion by 2040.
To help capture this huge opportunity, Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) revealed plans last fall for an $8 billion (¥1 trillion) fund to support biomanufacturing. The field encompasses technologies that leverage genetic technology to maximize the ability of microorganisms to produce substances.
Hirokazu Shimoda, director of METI’s Bio-Industry Division, explained why the country plans to go big on bio.
“It is only a matter of time before the global manufacturing industry is replaced by bioprocesses,” he said. “That’s why we are making medium- to long-term investments on the scale of about ¥1 trillion to build a system for companies in the biotechnology and drug discovery markets to develop and manufacture in Japan, then earn money in the global marketplace.”
As well as driving economic growth, biomanufacturing is also expected to be key in solving global issues such as marine pollution, global warming, and food shortages. Some top players in Japan’s biomanufacturing field are already making a difference in those areas.
Green Planet
In 2011, Kaneka Corporation achieved the world’s first commercial production of plastic that degrades in the ocean. The Osaka-based company plans to quadruple the production capacity of its biodegradable biopolymer called Green Planet to 20,000 tons in January 2024.
Kaneka began developing Green Planet in the early 1990s, when global environmental problems such as global warming began to emerge. The project was launched due to the strong desire of researchers to provide environmentally friendly products that don’t depend on fossil fuels.
Green Planet has qualified for the BiomassPla Identification and Labelling system, awarded to materials composed of biomass. It has also received the OK Biodegradable MARINE certification, issued by TÜV Austria Belgium NV/SA for materials that biodegrade in seawater.
Currently, Green Planet is used in straws, plastic shopping bags, cutlery, food containers and agricultural supplies. Seedling pots made with the material can be left to biodegrade after being buried in the soil. Kaneka is studying the material’s effects on natural cycles, including changes to bacteria in the soil.
“The focus of our research is to expand the range of physical applications for which Green Planet can be used,” explains Dr. Shunsuke Sato, a researcher at Kaneka’s Agri-Bio & Supplement Research Laboratories. According to the company’s own estimates, the combined annual production volume of plastic alternatives in Japan, the United States, and Europe currently is about 25 million tons. The market for Green Planet as a substitute for traditional plastic is expected to expand as regulations tighten and awareness grows.
Looking to capture this demand, Kaneka is focusing on carbon dioxide (CO2) as a new raw material for mass production of Green Planet. The goal is to recycle CO2 using microorganisms thereby creating a new process of manufacturing that can address both environmental problems and economic development. Sato explains: “We have the technology to do this in the lab. For mass production, we need to develop a culture process that efficiently converts gas components, such as CO2 and H2 [Dihydrogen], into Green Planet.”
Redefining Meat
Culturing has deep roots. For hundreds of years, humans have used and improved upon it to make wine, cheese, and more. In recent years, new culturing techniques have unlocked the process for making lab-grown cultured meat, redefining what we believed to be possible.
One pioneer of this movement is IntegriCulture Inc. As competition in the development of cultured meat heats up globally, this Japanese startup is the world’s first to succeed in producing cultured foie gras. Dr. Yuki Hanyu, IntegriCulture’s CEO, began research in 2014 on the CulNet System, a unique cell culture technology for manufacturing cultured meat. In 2019, he completed a prototype of cultured foie gras using duck liver cells.
The expansion of the worldwide market for cultured meat provides a tailwind for development. According to market forecasts by US consultancy A.T. Kearney, cultured meat will make up 35 percent of the meat market by 2040. Hanyu believes that the spread of cultured meat will depend on price, taste, and consumers’ belief in its safety.
In terms of taste, IntegriCulture’s prototype cultured foie gras has been praised by culinary experts as having a good balance of richness and sweetness. The first commercial sales are planned for 2024 in Singapore, a market with a precedent. In 2020, Singapore approved the sale of cultured chicken developed by a US company. Domestically, IntegriCulture is aiming to begin sales in 2025, but Japan’s screening standards for areas such as safety have not yet been decided.
The potential advantages that come with cultured meat are enormous. IntegriCulture’s CulNet System makes it possible to produce cultured meat at about one ten-thousandth the cost of conventional culture methods. With conventional methods of cultivation, ingredients contained in the blood, such as the serum necessary for cell culture, are expensive and seen as an obstacle to commercialization. However, with CulNet System, IntegriCulture has succeeded in maintaining the appropriate nutritional content without using expensive ingredients. It can also culture cells from various animals including fish.
IntegriCulture plans to sell the CulNet System to food manufacturers and other organizations, and to work together with them to develop technologies that will enable mass production.
“Leveraging our core strength of engineering technology, we want our system to find its proper place in the world,” said Hanyu, who first got involved in so-called cellular farming because he wanted to make the cultured meat he read about as a child in science fiction novels. To this day, he continues to strategize about what he can make with biotechnology, taking inspiration from his beloved world of science fiction.
Companies such as Kaneka and IntegriCulture are just the tip of the iceberg in terms of Japanese biotechnology’s true potential. “Japan is good at the zero-to-one stage of research and development, but is often less adept at scaling up as an industry on the global level,” explains Kaneka’s Sato. That’s exactly what METI aims to change, helping these pioneers and other like them with the funding they need to mass produce and commercialize their innovative biotechnologies.
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Setting the Stage for Green Transformation
If renewable energy production is not doubled by 2030, power outages and energy system disruptions could become everyday affairs. To help the international community rise to what may be this generation’s greatest challenge, and to showcase some of the technologies that will assist the world in meeting it, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) organized Tokyo GX (Green Transformation) Week. The 10-day event ran from September 26 to October 7.
Japan gathers leaders and experts for key conference on decarbonization
If renewable energy production is not doubled by 2030, power outages and energy system disruptions could become everyday affairs. The World Meteorological Organization’s State of Climate Services annual report, released on October 11, has found that nations around the world are far off the 7.1-terawatt target needed to keep global temperatures from rising 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
Setting 2050 net-zero goals is well and good, but it is clear even more immediate action is needed.
To help the international community rise to what may be this generation’s greatest challenge, and to showcase some of the technology that will assist the world in meeting it, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) organized Tokyo GX (Green Transformation) Week. The 10-day event, which ran from September 26 to October 7, was a series of 10 international conferences focused on the many aspects of GX. The conferences covered everything from clean energy sources to carbon capture, highlighted some of the latest technological developments in a wide variety of fields, and explored joint policy frameworks in Asia.
Tokyo GX Week wrapped up a month ahead of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27), which was held November 6–20 in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt. The GX Week conferences looked ahead to the issues that this key global gathering would address. Japan will also host the G7 meeting next year, and world leaders can build on the groundwork established during Tokyo GX Week to reach ambitious and sustainable strategies that will influence the future of our planet.
Inaugural Meeting
More than 140 countries aim to be carbon neutral by 2050, but achieving this goal is no simple matter. GX offers a way forward. The strategy is a bold one, and seeks to bring about a change in economic, social, and industrial structures, so that they are driven by clean energy and spur economic growth and development through emissions mitigation.
To drive this strategy, METI hosted the inaugural Global Green Transformation Conference (GGX) on October 7, the final day of Tokyo GX Week. GGX was the first time that leaders and industry experts gathered to begin charting a path towards global GX.
The GGX addressed everything from how to incentivize the public and companies to turn to green products and services to introducing a new way to evaluate the reduction in CO2 emissions by using these products and services. It also tackled the tough questions related to establishing a more workable framework for decarbonization and rule-making that will help the whole world thrive.
Drawing the World
The conference was held in a hybrid format and more than 1,300 people attended online and in person. Given the significance of the event, it drew an impressive selection of participants. Speakers and panelists included representatives from five G7 countries, two international organizations, and 12 universities as well as research institutes and private companies.
Keynote speeches were delivered by prominent speakers from around the world:
- Shinichi Nakatani, state minister of METI
- John Kerry, special presidential envoy for climate from the United States
- Peter Bakker, president and chief executive officer of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD)
- Frans Timmermans, executive vice president of the European Commission
- Mathias Cormann, secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
- The Right Honorable Lord Callanan, parliamentary under secretary of state (minister for business, energy, and corporate responsibility) of the United Kingdom
- Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency
In his keynote address, Nakatani pointed out that the time for the world to act is now and highlighted some of the ways in which Japan has set a rigorous path for itself.
“First, by the end of the year, we will formulate a 10-year roadmap for GX investment, which aims to realize ¥1.1 trillion in investment through public–private sector cooperation over the next 10 years,” he explained. “Second, we will establish the GX League, a voluntary emissions trading framework for companies with ambitious reduction targets, which will be fully operational by 2023. And third, we will promote transition finance in the industrial sector, particularly high emissions industries.”
Nakatani also introduced the key topic of “mitigation contribution”—a means of evaluating the positive effects of a company’s influence on decarbonization that may lie outside its supply chain or national boundaries. The topic was subsequently referred to as “avoided emissions” at COP27. He explored this by presenting the example of a company selling heat pumps. If inefficient gas heating systems are replaced by efficient heat pumps the company produces, this may lead to a reduction in total global emissions. However, the company’s own emissions may rise due to the increased production of the heat pumps. While such a company is positively contributing to global emission reduction, it may be criticized for increasing emissions. This does not undermine the crucial importance of emission reduction from the company, but clearly indicates the need to recognize a new perspective.
Currently, mainstream frameworks focus on the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of a specific organization or entity, and it is key to continue to support the efforts based on these frameworks. But if a mechanism can be created to appropriately value avoided emissions, and resources such as finance can be directed to entities that are promoting these efforts, it will encourage the diffusion of green products and services and promote the achievement of net-zero emissions through economic growth.
Avoided emissions are being explored in the private sector through international partnerships, but if governments begin to support the concept and encourage more companies to incorporate it in their decarbonization efforts, it can lead to greater innovation across a wide swath of industries.
Looking ahead to the G7 in Hiroshima next year, Nakatani was optimistic.
“While each country has its own position, Japan will support the world’s GX while furthering international goals so that developing and developed countries will work in unison to promote initiatives that transcend barriers,” he said.
The G7 and other international forums will also offer the Japanese government opportunities to further discuss and refine the avoided emissions concept.
In his initial remarks, Peter Bakker put the task of the conference in stark relief, given the need to develop a strategy to combat climate change.
“We need full-fledged system transformation … We need to change everything,” he said. “The energy we use, the food we eat, the transport solutions that we look for. Therefore, being here at the Global Green Transformation Conference is a unique opportunity to engage with all of you about what needs to happen.”
First Movers
GGX was also groundbreaking because it marked the first event in Asia for the First Movers Coalition (FMC) of the World Economic Forum (WEF). The coalition was launched in November 2021, following COP26, with a distinct aim to decarbonize key economic sectors—such as materials and long-range transportation—which are critical to organizations around the world, but which generate 30 percent of annual GHG emissions.
More than 50 companies are members of the FMC and, as Nancy Gillis, program head for Climate Action and the FMC with the WEF, explained, their participation sends a message.
“When a company joins the First Movers Coalition, what they are doing is signing a demand commitment,” she explained. “That means that they are making a commitment to buy products and services [as] they do now. But instead of buying the products and services that they’ve bought historically, they choose those with more GHG emissions consequences.”
Gillis said the FMC is a natural fit for Japan, given the country’s dedication to innovative, green technologies. She added that transportation company Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Ltd. made an ideal member of the FMC, and its commitment to decarbonization can drive innovation in many fields. Toshiaki Tanaka, the company’s representative director and executive vice president, explained that the time was right to join the coalition: “What we need now is to take concrete actions to reduce our value chain emissions. But at the same time, we are going beyond the value chain and taking urgent action to mitigate emissions outside of our value chain by supporting emerging [carbon dioxide removal] technologies. Therefore, we decided to take part in the First Movers Coalition, a platform where we can leverage our collective purchasing power to develop and scale zero carbon technologies.”
Towards a Greener Society
Other panel discussions during GGX tackled the ways in which GX can be implemented in markets, the setting of standards, and international cooperation. “Designing a Green Market” explored methods for reducing emissions from the perspectives of supply and demand. Panelists agreed that there is no single policy that will lead to net-zero GHG emissions, but that it is necessary to create an environment which leads to the greater diffusion of green products.
The topic of avoided emissions was a recurring theme during the conference, and in the panel discussion “Standards and Evaluations Promoting Green Products/Services,” participants explored it in detail. They concurred that it is important to expand evaluation frameworks beyond the reduction of supply chain emissions to consider how countries and companies are helping cut GHG emissions through indirect means.
One key point that needs to be addressed when it comes to avoided emissions is to which products and sectors efforts can be applied. Participants in the discussion brought up the idea that it is important to establish clear differences between avoided emissions and existing GHG protocols and nationally determined contributions (NDCs), because the concept’s importance lies in additionally evaluating the contribution to global emission reduction, rather than undermining the efforts of a company to reduce its own emissions.
Panelists also pointed out that it is necessary to establish a strict method for evaluating avoided emissions. For example, subtracting avoided emissions from NDCs and Scope 1–3—that is, a company’s direct and indirect emissions—would be a form of greenwashing, and should be avoided when establishing these guidelines.
Finally, in the panel discussion “International Cooperation for Developing a Green Society,” participants delved into the thorny topic of working across borders to develop decarbonization strategies. The participants pointed out the importance of recognizing each country’s circumstances in setting cross-border policies. Considering the increasing dichotomy between the positions of developed and developing countries, the importance of developing a society which realizes both economic growth and emission reduction was also raised as an important topic. Business is an important enabler for these societies, and frameworks such as the Joint Crediting Mechanism—a system by which developed nations collaborate with developing nations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions—and business in adaptation could offer win–win actions for both developed and developing countries.
Following on the insightful conversations at GGX, METI hosted an event at COP27 about avoided emissions. During the session, the WBCSD—which founded the Scope 1–3 standards—gave an overview of their developing guidance for the concept. METI has also included countries such as the United Arab Emirates, host of COP28, and the United States, as well as representatives of the financial sector, including members of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero, in the discussion.
Conversations that began at GGX are expanding to a wider group of stakeholders, and next year, when Japan hosts the G7 meeting, METI will escalate the dialogue on these key issues that will help future generations live on a greener Earth.
Home-Grown Unicorns
There are 488 unicorns in the United States and 170 in China. Japan is home to just 11. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) is on a mission to narrow this gap. In June, Japan’s Cabinet Office approved the Grand Design and Action Plan for a New Form of Capitalism: Investing in People, Technology, and Startups. The plan includes the formulation of a five-year roadmap for nurturing Japan’s startup ecosystem.
Japanese startup investment poised to accelerate
There are 488 unicorns in the United States and 170 in China. Japan is home to just 11. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) is on a mission to narrow this gap.
The first step is identifying the barriers to global success for Japanese startups.
A combination of factors is hindering the development of Japan’s startup ecosystem, explained Shinpei Ago, deputy director-general for startup policy in the agency’s Minister’s Secretariat. Firstly, the entrepreneur population is relatively small. Rather than starting or joining startups, a lot of Japan’s top talent is being scooped up straight from university by big companies. Secondly, venture capital (VC) funds operating in Japan are small compared with those in many countries. And Japanese startups are often too focused on the domestic market and lack a global mindset.
All these issues are intertwined, so a piecemeal approach that tackles each one by one will not be effective. Instead, Ago concludes, a cross-ministry initiative featuring a comprehensive set of policy measures addressing all the challenges at once is needed.
In June, Japan’s Cabinet Office approved the Grand Design and Action Plan for a New Form of Capitalism: Investing in People, Technology, and Startups. The plan includes the formulation of a five-year roadmap for nurturing Japan’s startup ecosystem.
Agencies will also explore how to free up entrepreneurs from systems which discourage them from taking risks—specifically, the practice of requiring entrepreneurs to extend personal guarantees for loans from financial institutions, thus making them liable to repay debt. While the government-backed Japan Finance Corporation already provides loans to some startups without personal guarantees, this type of financing is set to be expanded.
To grow the talent pool for startups, METI is considering expanding its Exploratory IT Human Resources Project, also known as the MITOU Program, which aims to discover and nurture top IT talent. More than 2,000 people have completed the program since its launch in FY2000, and more than 300 have successfully started a business or brought a product to market. Well-known alumni include Miku Hirano, chief executive officer and founder of Cinnamon Inc., an artificial intelligence development company, and Ken Suzuki, chairman and CEO of Smart News Inc., developer of Japan’s leading news curation app.
The government’s new approach to working with international VC funds is sure to draw attention. Beyond capital, VC funds also bring valuable expertise on how to grow businesses, manage talent, and build rich networks. Partnering with international VC funds helps Japan expand opportunities to nurture fledgling domestic startups.
Japan has experienced a quiet renaissance as startup investments increased nine-fold between 2013 and 2021. That trend may be set to continue with the emergence of even more globally minded entrepreneurs.
One Japanese startup looking beyond Japan is Astroscale.
In the nine years since its founding, the on-orbit servicing company has leveraged its prowess in the deep tech sector to global acclaim. Time magazine named Astroscale to its TIME100 Most Influential Companies list in 2022.
Space debris is a truly global issue. More than 35,000 objects orbit Earth, including defunct satellites and upper bodies of rockets. A collision with these objects traveling at eight kilometers per second could greatly damage working satellites, potentially affecting national security, telecommunications, television broadcasts, and much more. Major disruptions could put us back 70 years.
The secret to Astroscale’s success lies in founder and CEO Nobu Okada’s pioneering of a completely new market—so new that some said it didn’t exist even on a global stage. From the start, he had a firm commitment to global business development. While many startups launch in Japan and aim to go global after achieving domestic success, working globally from the start primes a business for success and helps it avoid competing over the smaller domestic pool of funding, Okada said.
METI hopes that the success of new homegrown ventures such as Astroscale, combined with greater government support, will inspire and encourage more entrepreneurs to be bold enough to shoot for the stars.
Deepening Africa–Japan Business Ties
While the number of Japanese companies active in Africa has doubled over the past decade to more than 900, Japan continues to lag the European Union, the United States, China, and India. The Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry (METI) is focused on encouraging Japanese businesses to support sustainable growth in Africa through projects that address vital social needs, leverage digital transformation, provide technical skills training, and boost renewable power generation.
Investment in people, innovation, and sustainable energy to play a key role at the TICAD 8 conference
On August 27 and 28, the Republic of Tunisia will host an international conference dedicated to deepening the economic ties between Japan and the 54 nations that make up the continent of Africa. Japan has taken the lead in the Tokyo International Conference on African Development, otherwise known as TICAD, since 1993, when TICAD 1 was held in Tokyo. Meetings take place every three years, and the Tunisian gathering—TICAD 8—is only the second to be held in Africa.
While the number of Japanese companies active in Africa has doubled over the past decade to more than 900, Japan continues to lag the European Union, the United States, China, and India. The Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry (METI) is focused on encouraging Japanese businesses to support sustainable growth in Africa through projects that address vital social needs, leverage digital transformation, provide technical skills training, and boost renewable power generation.
TICAD 8 comes as foreign direct investment in Africa more than doubled between 2020 and 2021 to about $83 billion, according to a report by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. This underscores the vital and timely role of Japan–Africa relations ahead of the upcoming gathering of African leaders, development partners, and international and regional organizations, along with representatives of the private sector.
As former METI Minister Koichi Hagiuda told attendees of a TICAD 8 preview event, “Japan sees three key catalysts for partnership opportunities with Africa.” He went on to highlight how compelling demographics mean one in four people will be African by 2050 and noted that a digital revolution is driving a thriving startup scene. He added that, as Africans seek alternative ways to grow their economies, the opportunities for green growth projects will increase.
Digital Revolution
Carlos Oba is a good example of how Japanese expertise is helping fuel digital startups in Africa. He is co-founder of Dots for Inc., a tech startup launched in October 2021 with a mission to provide internet access to 200 million people living in rural areas of West Africa by 2030.
While it was a trip through Tanzania in East Africa that opened Oba’s eyes to how people living in rural areas are being left behind as the digitalization wave sweeps through larger towns and cities, Dots for’s initial projects have been in West Africa, beginning with Benin in December 2021 and Senegal the following year.
Emmanuel Agossou, the Dots for country manager in Benin, said the challenges are daunting. “Most of our clients are farmers, often with just primary-level education and small incomes from farms and fisheries—though we also have a few university students, graduates, and teachers,” he explained. “They live in villages where there is almost no electricity and no—or very weak—mobile network coverage and internet.”
That lack of universal online access is fueling a rapidly widening disparity between rural and urban areas of Africa, and Oba was prompted to action when he realized major digital players would be reluctant to invest based on low foreseeable profits.
Dots for was awarded just over $300,000 in seed money from two projects initiated by METI: AfDX and J-Partnership. The funding has enabled Oba and his co-founder, Sho Nakata, to develop d.CONNECT, a distributed wireless network communication infrastructure that brings the internet to African villages at extremely low cost. This is accomplished through Wi-Fi routers equipped with mesh network technology, which cuts out dead zones and can provide uninterrupted Wi-Fi.
Residents connected to the village wireless network can use their smartphones to access services and digital content stored on a server also installed in the village. Oba envisions a “smart village,” where users can use online platforms for distance learning, telemedicine, and crowd work. Not only is this meant to improve overall convenience, but the ability to access government and corporate digital services may also boost income and quality of life.
“As the Dots for services expand, villagers will get strong internet connectivity and digital platforms to boost their business, education, and work opportunities,” Agossou said. “Young people may be able to work remotely from their village homes, without the need to trek to the big cities, where they would be forced to live apart from their families.”
The system is operated on a subscription basis, targeting users who can see the prospective advantages and are prepared to commit to making ongoing payments. According to Agossou, Dots for employs local agents in or near villages who promote the services either face-to-face with farmers or in village meetings that include young people and village heads. The emphasis is on explaining the advantages of the service to the community as well as to those looking to run businesses, he added.
The service has been successful in helping men and women aged 23 to 45 find steady jobs, Agossou said. But the reality of life in an African village remains harsh, and he notes that payment challenges exist for villagers with small incomes as well as university students and new graduates who have yet to find employment. As a result, Dots for is testing a lower-fee business model to boost client interest.
Based on forecast population increases, and the rising desire to be connected, the need for the company’s offerings is likely to extend to other African nations.
“Dots for services have a huge potential market, and I can see the model expanding from Benin to many other French- and English-speaking African countries, such as Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Nigeria, to name just a few,” Agossou noted.
Sharing Skills
Japan is also committed to providing high-quality technical training to 5,000 young Africans over the next three years.
In Kenya, METI is cooperating with the Kenyan Association of Manufacturers (KAM) to promote training for human capital in the Kenyan manufacturing industry. METI seeks not only to raise technical levels throughout the entire Kenyan manufacturing industry, but to enhance the Japanese presence in the former British colony.
In February, METI dispatched a specialist team to Kenya, which conducted a 10-day guidance program. A further eight-day program was directed by similar specialists in June.
In May, representatives of the Kenyan Ministry of Industrialization, Trade and Enterprise Development, together with KAM, were sent to Thailand, where they took part in third-party training conducted by Japanese experts.
Among KAM’s client companies is Nairobi-based Plast Packaging Industries Ltd., a family-run business involved in the manufacture of environmentally friendly plastic bottling, packaging, and printing products. The company participated in a technical guidance program during which Japanese experts installed sensors on factory equipment and instructed program participants on how to apply the gathered data.
“Japanese technology has helped us monitor our production capacity on a real-time basis,” said Group Chief Executive Officer Mary Ngechu.
The sensors were installed at the Plast Packaging production line without disrupting operations. As a result, production efficiency has improved. This should also have a knock-on impact on sales, she added.
Ngechu has been impressed with the devotion of the Japanese engineers. “The Japanese team are committed to ensuring any project they spearhead goes to completion and that the companies benefit,” she said. “They have offered immeasurable support to me and my family in our business, and we look forward to partnering with them in different areas.”
Future Power
At the Second Japan–Africa Public-Private Economic Forum, held on May 3 in Nairobi, participating countries reaffirmed their commitment to green energy. Given the number of African states, and the different issues they face, there is no one-size-fits-all solution to green-energy requirements. METI’s stance is that the most realistic approach is for each nation to select the path that best suits its needs.
To solve the challenges of limited supply and higher costs for electricity, due to power generation through heavy fossil fuel use and power importation from neighboring countries, Toyota Tsusho Corporation has conducted studies financed by METI on the feasibility of solar power generation with battery storage in several countries, including Zambia, Angola, Eritrea, and Benin. One possible approach using this method is to store power generated during the day in batteries and discharge this energy at night.
Against the backdrop of a rapidly growing population, the Egyptian government is targeting the supply of 20 percent of electricity from renewable sources by 2022 via initiatives that include onshore wind power created with support from Japan.
Toyota Tsusho and its subsidiary, the renewable-energy company Eurus Energy Holdings Corporation, in partnership with France’s Engie and Egypt’s Orascom Construction PLC, have developed the 262.5-megawatt Ras Ghareb Wind Energy project. The wind farm is located on the west coast of Gulf of Suez, 260 kilometers southeast of Cairo. This project raised $320 million of limited recourse financing, of which the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) provided $192 million as overseas investment loans. The remaining $128 million came from commercial lenders Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation and Societe Generale as loans covered by Nippon Export and Investment Insurance (NEXI) Overseas Untied Loan Insurance.
The Ras Ghareb Wind Energy project is the first independent wind-power production project in the country. After reaching financial close in December 2017, it began commercial operation in October 2019—two months ahead of schedule. With 125 wind turbines, it continues to generate enough electricity to power 500,000 Egyptian households.
In December 2019, a €110 million project-financing loan agreement for the Taza onshore wind farm in Morocco—led by Parc Eolien de Taza, the shareholders of which are EDF Renewable and Mitsui & Co., Ltd.—was signed by JBIC, the Bank of Africa, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, and MUFG Bank, Ltd. The funds provided by the latter two commercial banks were insured by the state-owned export credit agency NEXI. The electricity generated by the project will be bought by Office National de L’Électricité et de l’Eau Potable, Morocco’s public electricity and water company.
Kenya has committed to the realization of a green, hydrogen-based society as it looks to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels and has established a working group led by the Ministry of Energy. A strategy and roadmap are currently being drawn up, and institutional design and development of pilot projects will follow.
Japan’s public and private sectors are expected to work together to lead the development of greener energy resources. For the 2022 fiscal year, Toyota Tsusho and METI have decided to implement a feasibility study on green-hydrogen value chain development in Kenya. This study aims to pursue the formation and commercialization of pilot projects which lead to a green economy. The goals of such projects include unlocking the potential of green hydrogen as a new energy source through various industries, such as freight and passenger transportation, port cargo handling, steelmaking, fertilizer manufacturing, and alternative fuel and electricity storage solutions.
Financial Foundation
Project finance is risky in some respects. The special-purpose vehicle set up to run the project has limited underlying capital, and repayment of loans is funded only from project proceeds, which can take years to come to fruition. Such long-term finance risk is higher in developing countries.
One way to mitigate risk is to have loans insured by organizations such as NEXI, which provides coverage for loans made by private-sector Japanese banks to overseas businesses in which Japanese companies participate. NEXI was founded in 1993 and, according to a NEXI International Relations Group spokesperson, a high-level African focus has been in place since TICAD 1, which was held the same year in Tokyo.
In December 2020, NEXI insured a $520 million loan made to the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) by Mitsubishi UFJ Bank, Ltd. and Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Co., Ltd. as support for the Pandemic Trade Impact Mitigation Facility (PATIMFA) for African countries affected by the Covid-19 pandemic. Through the PATIMFA program, the money is being widely used to support medical care, hygiene, environmental, and educational projects in Africa.
The spokesperson also revealed that NEXI has decided to participate in a telecommunications project in Ethiopia—jointly conducted by Sumitomo Corporation and Vodafone Group Plc of the United Kingdom—which began in May. The project will be reinsured by the African Trade Insurance Organization (ATI) based on a memorandum of cooperation concluded in 2019 at TICAD 7 in Yokohama.
Leading up to TICAD 8, NEXI is planning to host joint webinars with Afreximbank and ATI as side events to introduce these projects in more depth, the spokesperson said.
Tunisia is in an optimal position to host TICAD 8 given its unique geographical advantage as the gateway to the continent, as well as being an important partner for Japan in the Middle East and Africa. The conference has won the broad support of the African states, and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is scheduled to attend. Tunisian President Kais Saied will chair the conference—a role which he is scheduled to share with Macky Sall, president of the Republic of Senegal and chairperson of the African Union.
Backed by more stable funding sources for clean energy projects, high-level training facilities, and the rapid uptake of digital services across the continent, TICAD 8 is on its way to securing a firmer and more deeply founded relationship between Japan and Africa as we move toward 2050.
From Disaster to Tech Hub
Soon after the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, 2011, Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) began coordinating a wide range of efforts to revitalize this former disaster zone. METI’s revitalization initiatives were raised to a new level with the launch of the Fukushima Innovation Coast Framework in May 2017. Here’s how things are developing five years on.
The bold ambitions of Japan’s Fukushima Innovation Coast Framework
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For his first-ever trip to Japan, in 2011, Warren Buffett chose to visit Iwaki City, Fukushima Prefecture. What attracted the world’s most celebrated investor to a former mining community of some 300,000 residents far away from the bright lights of Tokyo? The Sage of Omaha came in person to show his support for Tungaloy Corporation, a leading maker of cutting tools. Tungaloy also happens to be owned and operated by a company led by Buffett. Just a few months after the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, 2011, devastated much of the surrounding region, Buffett stood in front of Tungaloy’s Iwaki headquarters holding a sign that read, “Never give up, Fukushima!” The act underscored his commitment to the company, its employees, and the community that hosts them.
Tungaloy President Satoshi Kinoshita explained: “Companies are only as good as their people. The workers here in Iwaki City are bright, diligent, and ambitious. They are filled with creative ideas. This wealth of local talent on our doorstep—combined with very supportive local communities and government agencies—makes the case for investing in Fukushima so compelling.”
Fukushima Reimagined
Iwaki City is just one of a string of towns and cities in the Hamadori area, Fukushima Prefecture’s coastal region facing the Pacific Ocean which was hardest hit by the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disasters. Soon after the catastrophe, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) began coordinating a wide range of efforts to revitalize this former disaster zone. METI’s revitalization initiatives were raised to a new level with the launch of the Fukushima Innovation Coast Framework in May 2017. Under the framework, the ministry is attracting innovators in six core sectors through financial and other types of aid. The core sectors include:
- Decommissioning
- Robotics and drones
- Energy, environment, and recycling
- Agroforestry and fisheries
- Medical care
- Aerospace
Future Tech Hub
In the 11 years since the earthquake, recovery has focused on restoring businesses to their original locations in Fukushima through business and livelihood restoration efforts; but that doesn’t provide a vision of Fukushima’s future. The Fukushima Innovation Coast Framework aims for “creative reconstruction” by developing new industries in the prefecture’s coastal region.
“As we attract outside companies, we also want locals to restart their businesses. True creative reconstruction is only realized once local companies successfully mesh with new partners and drive the creative cycle,” explained Masami Miyashita, director of METI’s Fukushima New Industries and Employment Promotion Office.
A Leg Up for Robotics
One of the cutting-edge research and development facilities is the Fukushima Robot Test Field. It offers experimental equipment and development facilities such as tunnels, bridges, and runways for aircraft to test the performance of robots for infrastructure inspection and communication towers for drones.
Sou Yanbe, growth manager of the venture capital Real Tech Fund, explained: “Test environments that can assess the durability of devices are indispensable for the commercial rollout of hardware such as robots and drones. But most startups can’t afford to own and operate the facilities needed to conduct these tests. Robotics startups aiming for mass production should first consider setting up a base in the Hamadori area of Fukushima.”
Big Hydrogen Plants
Take for example the small community of Namie, which has been reimagined as Hydrogen Town Namie and houses one of the world’s largest-capacity hydrogen plants: Fukushima Hydrogen Energy Research Field. Sucking up an enormous amount of energy generated by solar panels, the field applies this solar energy to produce enough hydrogen fuel daily to power about 150 households or to fully charge 560 fuel-cell vehicles.
In response to the national government’s 2050 Carbon Neutral Declaration, which is expected to encourage even further the introduction of renewable energy in Japan, Namie has declared itself a zero-carbon city, aiming to achieve virtually no carbon dioxide emissions by 2050. While this will promote the generation and use of renewable energy, the key to achieving their 2050 goal is found in the “create local, use local” strategy for clean Namie hydrogen produced at the Fukushima Hydrogen Energy Research Field.
Drones to the Disaster Response
Meanwhile, the startup Terra Labo is addressing the other side of the coin: disaster preparedness. Investing just over $2 million to build a research, development, and manufacturing hub next to Fukushima Robot Test Field, Terra Labo Chief Executive Officer Takahide Matsuura aims to develop and commercialize long-range, unmanned drones by the end of 2023.
Matsuura envisions a disaster management system where fixed-wing drones capable of long-distance flight share images and 3D models generated from aerial surveying with a special analysis team, which then passes them on to government bodies.
“No other facility is so well equipped with not only an airfield and testing facilities, but also ancillary facilities,” Matsuura said, noting how critical the facilities are to his vision. “This makes it ideal for a development-centered company. It must not have been easy to secure the site.”
Engaging Education
But it’s not all billionaires, venture capitalists, and entrepreneurs. The next generation of Fukushima residents is just as involved. In the classroom of a local school, children’s eyes light up when one palm-sized robot bows. The robot attracting their attention is the Aruku Mechatro WeGo, designed to help children learn programming. Classes such as these are held regularly in Fukushima for elementary and middle school students with the hopes that some will grow up to be the innovators of the future. And perhaps, in the years to come, one of Buffett’s successors will visit Fukushima and be inspired by local creativity and entrepreneurship to invest more in the vibrant Fukushima of the future.