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Sumitomo Mitsui and Mizuho to end lending for new coal-fired plants

Apr 17 (Japan Times) - Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. said Thursday it would no longer lend to new coal-fired power plants from May 1, a day after peer Mizuho Financial Group Inc. said it would stop financing new power projects involving the fossil fuel.

The policy change comes as the sector faces pressure from activist investors and environmental groups to help mitigate climate change.

SMFG said in a statement that the movement toward decarbonization has been progressing globally since the Paris climate accord and that it “would not provide financial support in principle to new coal-fired power plants.”

Japanese banks are among the few major lenders who have stuck to backing coal projects even as other banks worldwide cut their exposure to the fuel.

The nation’s three major banks, SMFG, Mizuho and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, have been among the world’s top five lenders to the coal power and mining industries over the past five years, according to Refinitiv SDC Platinum data.

Mizuho said Wednesday it would halve its ¥300 billion ($2.8 billion) in loans to coal power projects by 2030 and then to zero by 2050. It will also abolish new investments in and loans to construction projects for coal-fired plants with high carbon dioxide emissions effective June 1.

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The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has decided to raise its policy interest rate from an annualized 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent. This marks the first rate hike in six months and appears aimed at correcting the historically weak yen.

Japan is facing an unprecedented rice shortage, with recent data highlighting alarming supply-demand imbalances in the domestic market. The Agricultural Newspaper reported on January 10 that the DI (Demand-Supply Index), a measure of rice market balance, reached a record high of 80. This figure indicates a critical shortfall in rice availability, surpassing even last year's levels when supermarket shelves were emptied.

The resignation of popular television personality Masahiro Nakai has sent shockwaves through the Japanese entertainment industry. Announced through his agency’s website, Nakai apologized, stating, “I’m truly sorry for this sudden farewell.” His decision to retire has sparked debates over whether this marks the conclusion of ongoing controversies surrounding him and the television networks involved.

Three people were attacked near JR Nagano Station at around 8 p.m., leaving a man in his 40s in a state of cardiopulmonary arrest and two others hospitalized.

Naoya Inoue, the unified world super bantamweight champion across four major boxing organizations, will face Kim Ye-jun, the World Boxing Organization's (WBO) 11th-ranked contender, at Ariake Arena in Tokyo on January 24th.

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