Tech Japanese power plant

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by crandc, Oct 5, 2025 at 11:41 AM.

  1. crandc

    crandc Well-Known Member

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    Japan just launched osmotic power plant. It generates electricity using ion exchange between fresh and sea water. Nothing else. No fossil fuels, no radiation, no pollution.

    US is shutting down renewable energy development.
     
  2. Phatguysrule

    Phatguysrule Well-Known Member

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    That sounds incredible!

    Japan has opened its first osmotic power plant – so what is it and how does it work?

    [​IMG]

    Japan’s first osmotic power plant uses the process of osmosis to power a turbine that in turn creates energy.
    Photograph: Fukuoka Area Waterworks Agency


    Japan has opened its first osmotic power plant, in the south-western city of Fukuoka.

    Only the second power plant of its type in the world, it is expected to generate about 880,000 kilowatt hours of electricity each year – enough to help power a desalination plant that supplies fresh water to the city and neighbouring areas.

    That’s the equivalent of powering about 220 Japanese households, according to Dr Ali Altaee from the University of Technology Sydney (UTS), who specialises in the development of alternative water sources.

    While it is still an emerging technology being used only on a modest scale as yet, it does have an advantage over some other renewable energies in that it is available around the clock, regardless of the wind or weather or other conditions.

    It relies simply on the mixing of fresh and salt water, so the energy flow can continue day and night, providing a steady source of electricity.

    So what is osmotic power and could it be used elsewhere?
    What is osmotic power?

    Osmosis is the natural process where water moves across a semipermeable membrane from a less concentrated solution to a more concentrated one, in an attempt to balance the concentration on both sides.

    Picture a cup divided vertically by a thin, semi-permeable layer – if one side holds salty water and the other side pure freshwater, the water will flow towards the salty side to dilute it, because the salt itself cannot pass through the membrane.

    Osmotic power plants use this same principle, by placing freshwater and seawater on either side of a special membrane, with the seawater slightly pressurised.

    As water flows across to the saltier side, it increases the volume of pressurised solution, which can then be harnessed to produce energy.

    In the Fukuoka facility, fresh water – or treated wastewater – and seawater are placed on either side of a membrane. As the side with seawater increases in pressure and decreases in salinity, some of the water is channelled through a turbine that is connected to a generator, producing power.


    Where else is the technology being used?


    The Fukuoka plant is the second of its kind in the world. The first one was built in 2023 in Mariager, Denmark, by the venture company SaltPower, said University of Melbourne Prof Sandra Kentish.

    The Japanese power plant is larger than the one in Denmark, according to Dr Altaee, although they have almost the same operating capacity. Pilot-scale demonstrations have also taken place in countries such as Norway and South Korea.

    Altaee said UTS has its own prototype in Sydney, but the program lost traction during Covid. He has also helped build prototypes in Spain and Qatar.

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  3. riverman

    riverman Writing Team

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    My son is going to Japan for the first time in a couple of weeks. He's excited to spend a week there.I loved it when I visited. Very clever country in many ways.
     
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  4. Shaboid

    Shaboid Well-Known Member

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    My dad just got back from Okinawa traveling on Space A flights. He had quite the adventure and said it was a great trip. He struggled with the language barrier though for sure.
     
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  5. riverman

    riverman Writing Team

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    I've spent more time in Okinawa than Japan..had our honeymoon there in Koza. We hiked the Gyokusendo Caves at White Beach. I was docked there off and on in the Navy when I was 18...it's a lot different now.
     
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