Item Description
As it turns out Japan’s total coal consumption hit a peak in 2007 and hasn’t moved upwards much since then. In fact, in 2011, total coal consumption dipped roughly 6 percent. This changed slightly in 2012 when coal consumption did go up — a whopping 0.2 percent in the power sector and 4 percent for industrial uses — hardly a resurgence.
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Archive
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Media Creator Username
Kaitlin and James
Media Creator Realname
Kaitlin and James
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Archive Once
Scope
One Page
Internet Archive Status
Verified
Language
English
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https://partner.archive-it.org/1131/collections/7472/seeds/2082063
https://partner.archive-it.org/1131/collections/7472/crawl/1004532/
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English Title
Fukushima and the Japanese Coal Myth | HuffPost
English Description
As it turns out Japan’s total coal consumption hit a peak in 2007 and hasn’t moved upwards much since then. In fact, in 2011, total coal consumption dipped roughly 6 percent. This changed slightly in 2012 when coal consumption did go up — a whopping 0.2 percent in the power sector and 4 percent for industrial uses — hardly a resurgence.
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http://wayback.archive-it.org/7472/20160601000000/https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fukushima-and-the-japanes_b_3062522
Attribution URI
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fukushima-and-the-japanes_b_3062522