20240318 Noshiro Port, Akita

Turbines silhouetted in the sunset at Noshiro Port, Akita, Japan, will form part of the country's biggest offshore wind farm as Japan seeks to allay fears of impacts on fishing communities while ramping up its wind power capacity fivefold by 2030. (Photo by Masayuki Kozono) 

Japan sails close to offshore wind snags as fisheries, tech challenges lurk

Fishing co-ops must clear plan to connect turbines to central grid amid seabed doubts

TOKYO -- The fate of Japan's grand plan to tap into its plentiful wind power resources hangs on the 800-kilometer cable it needs to build to connect the populous center of the country to turbines off its northwest coast. It also depends on a 20-centimeter fish.

What happens to the perch-like Japanese sandfish will play a key role in whether the fishing communities of Japan's northern Akita prefecture agree to accept having 264 km of coastline, where the species breeds, dotted with 160 or so giant turbines just offshore over the next few years.

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