Accidental Blogger

A general interest blog

In one of my previous posts on Japan, I had mentioned the Japanese zeal for cleanliness, conservation and recycling. In the same post I also made a passing reference to Japanese toilets. Yes, bathrooms in Japan are well appointed. In most hotels where I have stayed the toilets featured warmed seats and water jets designed for washing.  Some even had separate jets aimed at male and female anatomy for accurate and thorough ablution. I had also described toilets outfitted with background "natural" sounds and music that automatically come on when the bathroom is occupied. I know all this from my experience in Japanese hotels. What I did not know is that more and more homes in Japan also boast such precision guided, ultra-comfy, multifunctional, energy guzzling and musical (Ave Maria is a favorite) toilets.

Japanese_toiletsTOKYO — When it comes to saving energy, the Japanese have much to teach the United States and other rich countries, whose leaders descend on Japan next month for a Group of Eight summit.

Energy consumption per person here is about half that in the United States, and the growth of greenhouse gas emissions is slower than anywhere in the industrialized world.

There is a hiccup, though, in this world-beating record. It happens inside the Japanese home, where energy use is surging. And nothing embodies the surge quite like the toilet — a plumbing fixture that has been reengineered here as an ultracomfy energy hog.

Japanese toilets can warm and wash one’s bottom, whisk away odors with built-in fans and play water noises that drown out potty sounds. They play relaxation music, too. "Ave Maria" is a favorite….

At the G-8 meeting next month, Japan will be pushing the United States and other member countries to accept mandatory limits on emissions of the gases, which cause global warming.

Since the oil shock of 1973, no industrialized country has been more effective in squeezing more affluence out of less imported energy than Japan, experts say. Relative to its economy, Japan consumes only a third as much oil as it did 35 years ago…..

No such shotgun marriage, however, has taken place in the Japanese home, where energy consumption has jumped by 213 percent since the 1973 oil shock. Government figures have shown that household power use has risen at almost exactly the same rate as personal spending. (Despite the rise, per capita residential emissions of greenhouse gases in Japan are only 41 percent of those in the United States.)

"Consumers won’t sacrifice comfort for the sake of energy conservation," said Yasuhiro Tanaka, chief of the energy efficiency division at the agency for natural resources and energy. "Consumers won’t follow that path because we are richer."

Since the government cannot stop affluent consumers from buying flat-screen televisions and super toilets, it has chosen to squeeze manufacturers, requiring them to meet increasingly strict energy targets.

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2 responses to “Japanese “Bottom Line” on Energy Conservation”

  1. Sujatha

    I’m afraid that I’m never going to be able to hear ‘Ave Maria’ again without thinking of Japanese potties- just as Dean complained about Andrea Dworkin spoiling Beethoven and the Kreutzer Sonata for him.

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  2. People who strive and have the desire to save the earth by researching and inventing alternative source of energy without polluting the environment are the new heroes of today. They are making the survival of the next generation possible.
    i salute you guys!
    mugen

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