Wear turtlenecks to save energy, Tokyo folk urged | Inquirer

WINTER FASHION MEETS POWER CONSERVATION

Wear turtlenecks to save energy, Tokyo folk urged

/ 05:34 AM November 20, 2022

Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike STORY: Wear turtlenecks to save energy, Tokyo folk urged

Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike said she will be wearing a turtleneck to stay warm this winter. (Reuters)

TOKYO  — Trying to stay warm while cutting energy bills this winter? Wear a turtleneck, says Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike.

The governor, wearing one herself under a jacket, encouraged residents to don turtleneck jumpers both to stay warm and as a way of reducing energy consumption.

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“Warming the neck has a thermal effect. I’m wearing a turtleneck myself and wearing a scarf also keeps you warm. This will save electricity,” Koike told reporters on Friday.

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“This is one of the tools to get through the harsh winter energy climate together,” she said, adding that French President Emmanuel Macron was “taking a lead in wearing turtlenecks.”

Japan has long conducted an annual “cool biz” campaign, in which a casual dress code is encouraged in offices to save energy during the country’s sweltering summers.

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The winter version is dubbed, appropriately enough, “warm biz.”

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Like many countries, Japan — which is aiming to become carbon neutral by 2050 — has faced a squeeze on its energy supply since Russia’s February invasion of Ukraine.

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Push for nuclear energy

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in August called for a push to revive the country’s nuclear power industry in a bid to tackle soaring imported energy costs.

But such a move would likely prove controversial in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, triggered by a massive tsunami, which led to the suspension of many reactors due to safety fears.

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Eleven years later, 10 of Japan’s 33 nuclear reactors are back in action, although not all are operational year-round as the country remains heavily dependent on imported fossil fuels.

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