Japan greenhouse gas emissions fell 6.2% last year
* Emissions 1.286 bln tonnes CO2 equiv vs record 1.371 bln
* Japan meets Kyoto commitments for first time (Adds details, background)
TOKYO, Nov 11 (Reuters) - Japan's greenhouse gas emissions sank 6.2 percent to 1.286 billion tonnes in carbon dioxide equivalent in the year to March from a record 1.371 billion tonnes a year earlier, government data showed on Wednesday.
It is the first year in which Japan, the world's fifth-largest polluter, has met its Kyoto Protocol commitments to fight against global warming.
Japan's 2008/09 emissions were up 1.9 pct from the Kyoto protocol's 1990/91 base year, the data showed.
The government is to finalise Wednesday's figures in April.
The steep fall in 2008/09 came despite the utilisation rate of the country's nuclear power plants staying as low as a year earlier. Nuclear power is carbon-free and plays a key role in Japan's emission-cutting plans to meet its Kyoto goals.
Instead, the fall in emissions mainly reflected a slump in industrial activity in 2008/09, when the world's No.2 economy shrank 3.2 percent and the number of people who lost their jobs rose by a hefty 640,000. [ID:nT179477] (Reporting by Risa Maeda; Editing by Michael Watson |