Journal of Japan Society of Energy and Resources
Online ISSN : 2433-0531
ISSN-L : 2433-0531
Current issue
Displaying 1-2 of 2 articles from this issue
Technical Paper
  • Tetsuya Kitagawa
    Article type: Technical Paper
    2026Volume 47Issue 2 Pages 32-43
    Published: March 10, 2026
    Released on J-STAGE: March 10, 2026
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Atmospheric temperature influences the electricity load while the effect of wind on that is small relatively to the other weather factors. Some researches indicate that the sea wind blowing over an urban area can suppress the temperature rise and can reduce the electric power demand in summer. The objective of this study is to investigate the implicit effect of the sea wind on the electric power demand in the Tokyo’s 23 wards area. The hourly electric power demand is decomposed to the data set at each time, and they are modeled with cubic function of the temperature. Additionally, the model on the relationship between the wind speed and the temperature is made in the form of the spatial difference. A simple simulation using these models is carried out and the effect of the sea wind on the electric power demand is discussed.
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  • Seiya Matsukura, Yuriko Hayabuchi
    Article type: Technical Paper
    2026Volume 47Issue 2 Pages 44-49
    Published: March 10, 2026
    Released on J-STAGE: March 10, 2026
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This study quantitatively assesses the adoption of carbon-offset city gas and its institutional, accounting-based greenhouse gas (GHG) offsetting effects in Japan’s city gas sector. As of October 2025, 55 of 190 city gas companies (29%) have adopted carbon-offset city gas, covering approximately 93% of national gas demand, with particularly high coverage in the Kanto, Chubu, and Kinki regions. Applying a CO₂ emission factor of 2.10 t-CO₂ per thousand m³ to an annual supply of 32.2 billion m³ (46 MJ/m³), combustion-stage emissions are estimated at 67.47 Mt-CO₂eq. Offsetting potentials are evaluated using three cases (1%, 5%, and 10%). Under the high-level 10% case, corresponding to the institutional upper limit of credit usage, approximately 6.75 Mt-CO₂eq can be offset, equivalent, under a consistent accounting framework, to about 40% of the Japan Gas Association’s 2030 reduction target. While these offsets represent accounting measures rather than physical emission reductions, they function as transitional tools that should be integrated with technologies such as CCUS, e-methane, and hydrogen for long-term decarbonization.
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