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    Daiwa House Industry - Diskussion - 500 Beiträge pro Seite

    eröffnet am 21.03.11 10:31:54 von
    neuester Beitrag 13.07.11 15:22:54 von
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      schrieb am 21.03.11 10:31:54
      Beitrag Nr. 1 ()
      ちわ (Hallo)

      Ich will nun hier mal die Diskussion zu Daiwa House Industry anstoßen. Hier handelt es sich meiner Meinung nach um ein Bau-Unternehmen mit hervorragenden Zahlen und Wachstumschancen. Außerdem werden seine Dienste für den Wiederaufbau der durch das Sendai-Erdbeben zerstörten Regionen in Japan benötigt.

      Auf eine spannende Diskussion,
      Vitalstatistix
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.03.11 11:12:35
      Beitrag Nr. 2 ()
      Contractors Rush in as Kan Pledges to Rebuild After Japan Quake

      By Naoko Fujimura and Masumi Suga
      March 21 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese contractors have rushed workers, generators and equipment to areas devastated by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that damaged or destroyed more than 110,000 buildings and may have killed 20,000 people.

      “We’ve had many, many requests” for floodlights, power equipment and construction gear since the temblor, said Takashi Yamada, a spokesman for Osaka-based Nishio Rent All Co. “We’re just sorry we don’t have enough stock for everyone.”

      The government has asked companies such as Daiwa House Industry Co. to supply more than 30,000 temporary houses within two months to help shelter the 350,000 people now in evacuation centers. Prime Minister Naoto Kan has also pledged to “rebuild from scratch” following the magnitude-9 quake and tsunami that damaged about 1,500 roads, 48 bridges and 15 railways, according to the National Police Agency.

      “The scale of the rebuilding will be huge,” said Kazuo Susa, a spokesman for Fukuda Corp., a general contractor based in Niigata prefecture, northwestern Japan.

      Fukuda started inspecting buildings the day after the quake and it began repairs to facilities including shopping centers the following day to help customers resume operations, Susa said. The company is now reinstalling fallen ceilings and working on other repairs in buildings that avoided the worst of the damage as it awaits the start of full-fledged reconstruction, he said.

      Shares Jump

      Speculation that Fukuda will win rebuilding contracts has caused it to jump 92 percent on the Tokyo stock exchange since March 10, the last day of trading before the quake. That’s the third-best performance among the 1,666 companies on the index, which has dropped 8.1 percent.

      Nissei Build Kogyo Co., a maker of prefabricated houses, leads gains having more than tripled since March 10. Osaka-based builder Fudo Tetra Corp. has more than doubled. Construction- related companies account for 39 of the 40 best-performing Topix stocks in the period.

      Reconstruction and relief efforts in the disaster area have been hampered by snow, damaged roads and fuel shortages. The devastation also covered a greater area than the 1995 Kobe quake and included many smaller towns with few transportation links.

      “The damaged area is very wide, and it will be an all-out battle,” said Nobuyuki Ogawa, a spokesman for Tokyo-based Toa Corp., which specializes in building harbor facilities. “The coastline is all destroyed.”

      Toa Taskforce

      Toa has set up a taskforce to work on temporary repairs so that ports can handle relief shipments, and it is also sending in supplies of food and blankets for employees and others, he said. The company’s office in Sendai has no gas supplies, which is hampering efforts, he said.

      The government said last week that 11 harbors were damaged in the tsunami, all of which were expected to be at least partially open for emergency supplies by March 22. Companies such as Toa and Toyo Construction Co. are repairing broken quay walls and removing debris clogging waterways.

      “The priority is to restore operations at those damaged ports as soon as possible,” said Atsushi Miyazaki, a spokesman for Tokyo-based Toyo Construction, which has sent about 30 workers to the region.

      The Japan Civil Engineering Contractors Association has set up more than 400 temporary toilets in Tohoku and sent in supplies including 300 futon sets, 2,000 blue sheets and 12,000 bottles of water, it said by e-mail.

      Supplier Damage

      Companies that will lead the reconstruction effort also suffered their damage in the disaster. Osaka-based Daiwa House’s regional distribution center near Sendai airport was destroyed in the flooding, Chairman Takeo Higuchi said at a press conference last week.

      Damage to factories or power shortages stemming from a nuclear-power plant being crippled by temblor may also affect supplies of construction materials, said Higuchi, who’s also the head of the Japan Federation of Housing Organizations.

      It took a year to rebuild major infrastructure following the Kobe quake and the bulk of the repairs after the Sendai disaster may take as long, said David Edgington, an associate professor at the University of British Columbia. Rebuilding will likely be cheaper than the $100 billion (in 1995 dollars) cost following Kobe as Tohoku has fewer major buildings, he said.

      “It will be a fraction rather than a multiple of Kobe,” said Edgington, author of the book “Reconstructing Kobe: The Geography of Crisis and Opportunity.”

      Housing Land

      It may also be easier to find land for building temporary or permanent public housing as Tohoku is largely agricultural, he said. After the Kobe quake, many people were relocated far from the city centre because the only land available was on the other side of a mountain, which broke up communities, he said.

      There may be less incentive to rebuild in Tohoku as much of the region’s economy was in decline with younger people already leaving to find work elsewhere. Job prospects in Miyagi, where nearly 5,000 people died in the quake, were worse than in most of the nation’s 47 prefectures in January.

      “The government has to make some hard choices as to whether to keep these coastal communities going,” Edgington said.

      Prime Minister Kan has pledged to rebuild and his government aims to compile a relief and reconstruction package as soon as next month. The biggest opposition party is calling for a 5 trillion yen ($61 billion) effort.

      “Rebuilding will take a very long time and a lot of effort,” said Toa’s Ogawa.

      --With assistance from Kiyotaka Matsuda in Tokyo and Matt Walcoff in Toronto. Editors: Neil Denslow, Bret Okeson

      To contact the reporters on this story: Naoko Fujimura in Osaka at nfujimura@bloomberg.net; Masumi Suga in Tokyo at msuga@bloomberg.net

      To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.03.11 11:20:51
      Beitrag Nr. 3 ()
      Japan begins task of housing thousands left homeless by tsunami

      RIKUZENTAKATA, Japan — Japanese workers began the huge task this weekend of building the temporary housing needed to move hundreds of thousands of homeless tsunami survivors out of cold, crowded shelters.

      Construction teams drove wooden stakes into the playing field of Daiichi middle school in Rikuzentakata on Saturday, marking the spot where 36 prefabricated units will stand.

      The houses, each around 30 square metres, will provide accommodation for families of between two and five people, Rikuzentakata city mayor Futoshi Toba told AFP.

      “These are the first wave, which we expect to be finished by the end of this month or the beginning of next,” he said, adding that each unit will have a dining room-kitchen and two living rooms.

      “We have plans for 200 houses in the immediate term at the school, but have asked the prefectural government for 4,000, although we are awaiting their final go-ahead.”

      Toba, whose own home was washed away by the waves that crashed through Rikuzentakata, said housing will be allocated according to need.

      “The elderly and those with young children will be given priority,” he said.

      Nationally, up to 500,000 people have been evacuated in Japan’s twin emergencies caused by the quake-tsunami and problems at a nuclear power plant in Fukushima.

      Around 9,500 people — more than a third of Rikuzentakata — were made homeless when the tsunami struck.

      Those who had no relatives nearby are being looked after by the city in municipal buildings.

      Volunteer Tsutomu Nakai has taken charge of organising the relief operation at Daiichi middle school, where, he says, the temporary housing can’t come soon enough.

      “At the moment we have around 1,000 people here,” he said. “Everyone is managing very well living together, but it would be better if they all had somewhere of their own,” said Tsutomu, who also lost his own home.

      The first phase of 200 homes are being put up by construction company Daiwa House, whose spokesman Takafumi Nakao said all prefabricated house builders had been asked by the government in Tokyo to produce 30,000 units.

      “Construction of 200 prefabricated houses began yesterday in the school at Rikuzentakata and we are building 36 of them,” he said.

      “The units have all the equipment that ordinary houses have, including a toilet, a bath, heating and water.”

      Nakao said the company was trying to ramp up production but the scale of the devastation made the task enormous.

      “It’s hard to speed up construction as the affected areas are quite wide.”

      People sheltering at Daiichi middle school gathered to watch workers break ground at the spot that will become their home over the coming months.

      As he watched heavy equipment rolling over the grit where school sports days are usually held, 74-year-old Rinzo Chikutsu said he was looking forward to a place to call home again — even a temporary one.

      “It will be good to have somewhere,” he said. “At the moment everyone is living in big communal areas and there is no privacy.”

      Great-grandmother Tokiko Kanno, who has slept on the stage in the school’s main hall since the tsunami struck, said the sight of men working on the temporary houses had lifted people’s spirits.

      “It’s good to see something happening with the houses outside,” she said.

      “They won’t be very big, but whatever they are, it will be better than being in here.”



      Read more: http://www.timescolonist.com/news/Japan+begins+task+housing+…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 25.03.11 14:33:17
      Beitrag Nr. 4 ()
      Falls sich eine Wende zu Erneuerbaren Energien in Japan einstellt, könnte Daiwa House Industry ebenfalls profitieren. Die Tochter Daiwa Energy ist im Ökostrom-Sektor aktiv.
      Außerdem haben Sie auch ein "Haus der Zukunft" etnwickelt, dass sich autark mit Energie versorgen kann und diese in einer Batterie speichert. Hier ist zum Beispiel ein Video zu dem Haus: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xefqfa_energy-efficient-hou…
      Hoffentlich gibt es bald eine weltweite Energiewende.
      2 Antworten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 25.03.11 19:46:04
      Beitrag Nr. 5 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.266.763 von Vitalstatistix am 25.03.11 14:33:17Also, ich habe mir einige Aktien von Caterpillar zugelegt. Die sind bereits in Japan präsent und deren Produkte werden zum Wiederaufbau und zur Stromversorgung (Aggregate)
      vorrangig benötigt. Auf dem Thread dort ist genauso wenig los.:rolleyes::D
      Für den Erwerb japanischer Aktien würde ich mir momentan noch etwas Zeit lassen.
      Falls die nukleare Bedrohung nicht unter Kontrolle gebracht werden sollte, ist nach Expertenmeinung ein weiterer Einbruch des Topix-Index in Tokio um 20 Prozent vorstellbar.
      1 Antwort

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      schrieb am 30.03.11 11:24:46
      Beitrag Nr. 6 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.268.653 von ernestof am 25.03.11 19:46:04Caterpillar ist nur eine völlig anderes Feld. Das japanische Pendant hierzu wäre Komatsu. Daiwa House bauen aber Häusle. Diese auch vorwiegend innerhalb Japans. Das Exportrisiko fällt also schon einmal weg. Viele Regionen Japans, nicht nur Fukushima, wurden von dem Erdbeben und dem Tsunami zerstört. Wer wird wohl die Häuser dafür bauen? Mit der Tochter Daiwa Energy sind die, wie schon erwähnt, auch in den Erneuerbaren Energien aktiv.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 08.04.11 12:11:21
      Beitrag Nr. 7 ()
      Hier ein Link zu einer weiteren Einschätzung (The Street):
      http://www.thestreet.com/story/11072816/1/2-homebuilders-to-…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.04.11 02:05:21
      Beitrag Nr. 8 ()
      Hallo zusammen.
      Ich wollte mir gerade eigentlich die Bilanzen der letzten Jahre von Daiwa besorgen um diese Morgen einer Fundamentalanalyse zu unterziehen...Allerdings finde ich sowohl auf der offiziellen Homepage bei den Financial Reports, sowie auch bei eigentlich allen anderen Homepages nur die JA der letzten zwei Jahre (oder eben nur Angaben zu den Kennzahlen dieser)

      Kann mir da vielleicht jemand weiterhelfen ?

      Ich halte die Baubranche Japans noch immer für eine sehr intressante Anlage. Allerdings blindlinks in die Baisse laufen sollte man ja auch nicht :)
      2 Antworten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.04.11 11:15:40
      Beitrag Nr. 9 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.392.254 von WarenBuefet am 20.04.11 02:05:21Einen schnellen Überblick erreicht man über diese Seite:
      http://www.4-traders.com/DAIWA-HOUSE-IND-6491158/fundamental…

      Den letzten Jahresbericht findest Du unter:
      http://www.daiwahouse.com/English/groupbrand/ar/2010annual/p…

      Financial Results 2008:
      http://www.daiwahouse.co.jp/English/financial_results/DaiwaH…

      Financial Results 2009:
      http://www.daiwahouse.co.jp/English/financial_results/pdf/Da…
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 26.04.11 11:16:50
      Beitrag Nr. 10 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.410.675 von Vitalstatistix am 26.04.11 11:15:40Weiter zurückliegende kann ich Dir auf die schnelle nicht nennen.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 07.06.11 10:27:01
      Beitrag Nr. 11 ()
      Japanese lifestyles catch on among Chinese middle class

      Quelle: asahi

      SUZHOU, China--Lu Li is moving to a smaller, but more expensive home. The attraction? Its Japanese features.

      Lu bought an 80-square-meter condominium for about 2 million yuan (24 million yen), close to her current condominium of more than 100 square meters.

      "The quality is guaranteed because a Japanese company is building it using many Japanese products," said the 43-year-old Lu, who lives with her husband and two children.

      China's expanding middle class is embracing the Japanese lifestyle, buying everything from condominiums, traditional Japanese rooms to goods and products.

      Lu's new home will be in China's first Japanese-style condominium complex, being built by the Daiwa House Industry Co. group.

      The 18 buildings will accommodate 902 households on a site nearly double the size of Koshien Stadium.

      About 400 units put on sale in the first and second phases are almost sold out, and the third phase, which began in April, has also attracted many prospective buyers.

      Like Lu, many of the buyers belong to China's middle class. The annual income of Lu's family is about 300,000 yuan.

      Lu's new condominium will have only two bedrooms, one less than her current home.

      Still, she was won over by the Japanese technology, including a washlet toilet and a floor heating system, which are still rare in China.

      Lu and other buyers will move into their new homes after the interiors are finished, a big difference from Chinese condominiums, whose inner walls are bare concrete when delivered.

      Lu said her current home is not comfortable, although she spent four months having its interiors finished. In winter, it is cold, even with a heating system.

      Daiwa's condominium complex comes with many other Japanese features.

      Bathtubs are installed in many homes, although Chinese usually take a shower. The entrance is made a step lower so that residents will take off their shoes and dust will not enter the rooms. In many Chinese homes, people walk in with their shoes on.

      Daiwa also plans to develop condominiums and detached houses for 400 families in Wuxi, which borders on Suzhou.

      "China is said to be in a housing bubble, but real demand is actually strong," said Senior Managing Executive Officer Hiroshi Azuma, who heads Daiwa's overseas business. "We want to build (Japanese-style) housing in many other locations in China."

      Marubeni Corp., Sumitomo Corp. and Mitsui Fudosan Residential Co. are also building or are planning to build Japanese-style housing in China.

      In Shanghai, Marubeni started construction of condominiums for 700 families last year, and Sumitomo will take part in a multi-purpose development project that includes housing. Mitsui Fudosan Residential plans to sell houses in Tianjin.

      Zhao Ping, deputy director of Xian International Studies University's School of Oriental Languages and Cultures, said one reason behind the popularity of Japanese-style condominiums is the "cleanliness, simplicity and comfort for which Japan is known for."

      Zhao, who is familiar with Japanese housing, said another likely reason is that quality of life has increased in importance among middle-class Chinese.

      The main product of Beijing-based Jingdou Heshi is a "traditional" Japanese room not found in Japan--one with a retractable table.

      Operated by remote control, an electric-powered table rises from the floor at the center of the room.

      During the day, Chinese eat at the wooden table after removing the tatami-mat covering, with their feet stretched into the opening that appears under the table.

      It is more comfortable for Chinese, who usually use a table and chairs.

      They sleep in the room with the table retracted to its original position.

      "The room is popular 70 percent for its cultural attractions and the remaining 30 percent for its functionality," said Bi Wanli, Jingdou Heshi's president.

      Bi was impressed by wooden housing when he studied in Japan. He started selling Japanese rooms after returning to China eight years ago.

      The company operates about 30 outlets in Beijing, Tianjin, Shenyang and other cities.

      Sales topped 10 million yuan last year after growing about 25 percent annually. Bi said he believes the market will grow even larger.

      A competitor operates 11 outlets in Beijing, Wuhan and elsewhere.

      A third company has three outlets in Shanghai. It receives up to 100 orders per month, with most customers being company owners.

      The Enjoy Easy store is a Chinese version of Japan's 100-yen shop.

      At an outlet in a subway station in Shanghai, about 5,000 items, including stationery and kitchen utensils, are on sale, mostly for five, 10 or 15 yuan each.

      Store manager Ding Zhihui said convenient products that are not found at other stores, such as carpet cleaning devices and washing nets, are popular.

      The store attracts 300 to 500 shoppers daily, including many women in their 30s and 40s.

      Yang Fang, 26, a company employee, dropped in on her way back and bought a towel and an imitation flower for 15 yuan each as a present for her friend.

      President Wang Shan, who worked at a trading house that supplies a Japanese 100-yen shop operator, founded the company in 2008.

      Wang thought the products designed for Japan would sell in China because Chinese began looking for convenience and quality as income levels increased.

      Wang plans to increase the number of outlets to 1,000 by 2015, up sharply from about 90 at present.

      At a sanitary ware exhibition in Shanghai in May, Huida Ceramic Group Co. displayed new products, such as toilets and bathroom items, based on designs by Japanese industrial designers.

      Japan's industry ministry organized a meeting in Shanghai last year to help industrial designers do business in China. Twenty groups of designers and about 100 Chinese companies took part.

      Li Jiutai, 31, who heads Huida Ceramic's design division, met some of the designers at the meeting and checked photographs of their previous works.

      "What they designed are sturdy even though they are thin and light," Li said. "They probably reflect characteristics of Japan, which is prone to natural disasters and is short of natural resources."

      Chinese traditionally favor large products with conspicuous designs, be it housing or clothing. But with growing awareness about environmental protection and resource conservation, simple, ecology-oriented products are gaining popularity.

      "The stage is being set for Japanese designs to be accepted in China," Li said.

      Middle-class Chinese are turning their attention to Japan because it has built a high-quality lifestyle based on advanced technologies while maintaining its own culture.

      In January, Zhi JP., a magazine specializing in the life and culture of modern Japan, sold its first issue in China. It featured automatic vending machines and robots.

      A total of 60,000 copies were printed, including 30,000 for the initial print run. The initial print run was increased to 40,000 copies for the second issue, which was released May 4.

      "The response was more than we expected, and we found that people have strong interest in Japan," said Su Jing, the 29-year-old editor in chief.

      Mao Danqing, 49, a Chinese author based in Hyogo Prefecture who is responsible for planning the magazine's content, noted that a variety of movements started in China to support Japan after the Great East Japan Earthquake.

      "The desire to know about Japan and Japanese is growing among Chinese, although the number of tourists fell due to the nuclear power plant accident," Mao said.

      Mao is considering featuring Japanese anti-disaster goods.

      "Many products are both useful and beautiful in design. They represent characteristics of modern Japanese culture," Mao said.

      Su said he wants to explore universal values in Japanese culture and introduce them to his readers.

      "Japan has maintained its traditional culture linked to China while absorbing Western culture during the Meiji Era and has integrated modernity into it," Su said.

      "China must face up to the world and learn about it. Japan is the most useful reference for that."

      (This article was written by Shingo Takano, Kyoko Isa and Yuri Imamura.)
      Avatar
      schrieb am 10.06.11 11:49:24
      Beitrag Nr. 12 ()
      Quelle: Bloomberg

      Daiwa House Forecast Record Profit on Rebuilding After Japan Earthquake

      Daiwa House Industry Co., Japan’s biggest home builder, expects profit to rise to a record for the current year on higher sales following the nation’s biggest earthquake.
      Operating profit, deducting the cost of goods sold from sales, will rise 8.3 percent to 95 billion yen ($1.19 billion) for the year ending March 2012, according to a statement distributed through the Tokyo Stock Exchange. That would exceed the previous high of 89.1 billion yen in the year ended March 2008. The forecast matched the median estimate of five analysts in a Bloomberg News survey.
      The Osaka-based builder, which earlier had postponed the profit forecast announcement because of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, may benefit from rebuilding demand following the temblor, analysts said. Its China operations may also gain as sales climb in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.
      “Profit generated from the China market is likely to offset short-term deterioration of sales for Daiwa House,” said Masahiro Mochizuki, an analyst at Credit Suisse Securities (Japan) Ltd. “Potential home buyers in Japan are likely to choose larger home builders they have confidence in.”
      Mochizuki had an operating profit forecast of 95.4 billion yen for the year. The estimates ranged from Barclays Capital Japan Ltd.’s 85 billion yen to the high of 96 billion yen by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
      Daiwa House’s shares climbed 1.5 percent to 1,006 yen at the 3 p.m. close of trading in Tokyo, a two-month high. The Topix Construction Index (TPCONT) advanced 0.6 percent.
      The company expects sales to rise 3.5 percent to 1.75 trillion yen for the year ending March 2012.

      Housing Boom
      Daiwa House’s orders gained 7 percent in April from a year earlier, outpacing the 0.3 percent increase in Japan’s housing starts for the same period, according to the company’s data and the land ministry.
      Sekisui House Ltd. (1928), Japan’s second-largest home builder, said last month it expects the biggest housing boom in the country in at least 15 years as homeowners seek to rebuild after the magnitude-9 temblor.
      “Daiwa House relies more heavily on non-housing businesses than peer Sekisui House and should be capable of offsetting some of the setback in domestic profits associated with a quake- related economic dip by booking condominium sales in Suzhou China,” Takashi Hashimoto, an analyst at Barclays, said in a report.
      Daiwa House’s profit from China may reach 7 billion yen this year after it first started apartment projects in 2006, Mochizuki estimates. Daiwa, which focused on rental apartments in China since 1985, started to build and sell homes in the nation five years ago to diversify as its home market shrank.

      Rebuilding Demand
      The March earthquake and tsunami destroyed or damaged more than 503,000 homes and 93,270 people are still staying in shelters, according to the National Police Agency.
      Temporary homes completed 74 days after the quake totaled 15,572 units, only about half of those finished during the same period after the great Hanshin Earthquake that hit Kobe, according to data compiled by Credit Suisse.
      “The construction of temporary housing is very slow and that means rebuilding demand will be delayed,” Mochizuki said. “The company can probably profit from rebuilding demand in northeastern region for the next two to three years.”
      Construction companies broke ground on 0.3 percent more homes last month from a year earlier, according to a report released on May 31 by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism in Tokyo.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.07.11 15:21:50
      Beitrag Nr. 13 ()
      Quelle: tagesschau.de

      Regierung ändert Haltung zu Atomenergie
      Auch Japan peilt jetzt den Ausstieg an
      Vier Monate nach der Katastrophe im Atomkraftwerk Fukushima plant die japanische Regierung offensichtlich eine Kehrtwende in ihrer Energiepolitik. Premierminister Naoto Kan kündigte an, Japan wolle in "Etappen" aus der Atomkraft aussteigen. Er gab aber keinen genauen Zeitplan an. Sein Land werde eine Gesellschaft ohne Kernkraftwerke schaffen, die nicht von der Atomkraft abhängig sei.

      Der Plan bedeutet eine Abkehr von der früheren Regierungslinie. Japan bezieht zurzeit etwa 30 Prozent der Energie aus Atomkraft und hatte vor der Katastrophe vom 11. März geplant, diesen Anteil bis zum Jahr 2030 auf 53 Prozent zu erhöhen.

      Japan müsse angesichts der "großen Gefahr von Nuklear-Unfällen" schrittweise seine Abhängigkeit vom Atomstrom verringern. Ziel sei es, durch die Förderung erneuerbarer Energien langfristig auf Atomkraft verzichten zu können. Das Parlament werde vermutlich morgen mit den Beratungen über ein Gesetz zu den alternativen Energien beraten.


      Naoto Kan will langfristig aussteigen - wahrscheinlich muss der unpopuläre Premier aber bald zurücktreten.
      Schwacher Rückhalt für Kan

      Allerdings wird der angeschlagene Regierungschef den Plan nach Einschätzung des ARD-Hörfunkkorrespondenten Nils Kinkel kaum noch verwirklichen können: Nur noch 16 Prozent der Japaner unterstützten seine Politik, sein Rücktritt in den kommenden Monaten sei so gut wie sicher.

      Kan hatte sich bereits in den vergangenen Wochen für eine Verringerung des Anteils der Atomenergie ausgesprochen. Gestern sagte er vor Abgeordneten, seine Regierung habe keine andere Wahl, als auf die geplante Erhöhung zu verzichten.

      Nun erläuterte er, die von einem Erdbeben und einem Tsunami ausgelöste Katastrophe in Fukushima habe ihm erst die großen Risiken der Atomkraft bewusst gemacht: Zehntausende Bewohner mussten damals ihre Häuser verlassen, die Behörden ordneten ein Sperrgebiet im Umkreis von 20 Kilometern um den zerstörten Meiler an. Nach dem Erdbeben versagten die Kühlsysteme im Katastrophenmeiler. Wegen einer Teil-Kernschmelze in drei der sechs Reaktoren gelangten große Mengen an radioaktiven Substanzen in die Umwelt.

      Stresstests sollen beruhigen

      Die Regierung hatte vergangene Woche sogenannte Stresstests für Atomkraftwerke angeordnet, um die besorgte Bevölkerung zu beruhigen. Um drohende Stromengpässe zu vermeiden, drängt die Regierung darauf, zur Inspektion heruntergefahrene Atomkraftwerke noch im Sommer wieder in Betrieb zu nehmen. Dies stieß in der Bevölkerung auf Kritik.

      Von den 54 Atomreaktoren in Japan sind laut ARD-Hörfunkkorrespondent Kinkel rund zwei Drittel abgeschaltet. Wegen der Sommerhitze und des hohen Energieverbrauchs von Klimaanlagen leide vor allem der Großraum Tokio unter einer massiven Stromknappheit.
      1 Antwort
      Avatar
      schrieb am 13.07.11 15:22:54
      Beitrag Nr. 14 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.782.388 von Vitalstatistix am 13.07.11 15:21:50Habe ich schon erwähnt, dass Daiwa House auch in Erneuerbaren Energien zugange ist :cool:


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      Daiwa House Industry - Diskussion