Asia’s Fintech Regulators Turn Up The Heat On Crypto, Cyber Risk And AI Governance

Fintech compliance pressures rise across Asia in early 2026.

Asian Development Bank Approves USD350 Million For Solar-Plus-Storage Projects In Thailand

Battery storage continues to play a growing role in Thailand’s renewable integration strategy.

New Two-Part Electricity Pricing Model Interacts With Vietnam’s DPPA Framework

Corporate renewable procurement incentives at risk if businesses pay twice for the same grid assets.

ASEAN Power Grid Emerges As A Key Vehicle Enabling Seamless Cross-Border Power Trading Across The Region

Interconnected grids could help balance renewable generation across Southeast Asia. The ASEAN Power Grid is back in focus.
SEND TO: pressreleases@pageonemedia.com

Japan’s 1st Osmotic Power Plant Begins Operations

Japan has officially begun operations at its first osmotic power plant, a groundbreaking move towards harnessing natural energy sources for a sustainable future.

Japan’s 1st Osmotic Power Plant Begins Operations

1575
1575

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Japan’s first osmotic power plant, which generates electricity by harnessing the difference in salt concentration between seawater and freshwater, began operations in early August in a southwestern prefecture, Kyodo News Agency reported Sunday.

The Fukuoka District Waterworks Agency, the second operator globally to use the technology after a Danish company implemented it in 2023, calls it “a next-generation renewable energy source that is not affected by weather or time of day and emits no carbon dioxide.”

The process, known as salinity gradient power, generates electricity through osmosis when concentrated seawater created by extracting fresh water is separated by a permeable membrane from treated water from a sewage treatment plant.

A turbine in the plant is rotated by pressure from the movement of water from the freshwater to the saltwater reservoir, with the turbine’s motion powering a generator to produce electricity.

The agency expects the plant, which started operations on Aug. 5 in Fukuoka, to generate 880,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity annually. This energy will be used to power a desalination facility that supplies fresh water to Fukuoka and nearby areas. (PNA)