Tokyo Nights May Soon Be Lit Up by a Country 1,700 Miles Away

  • Mongolia’s Shivee project aims to export power as far as Japan
  • State Grid of China, Softbank back Asian super grid projects
Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
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The lights of the high-end boutiques and bars of Tokyo’s Ginza neighborhood may someday be powered by coal burned more than 1,700 miles away (2,700 kilometers) in Mongolia, electricity zipping over ultra-high voltage lines across deserts and under seas.

That’s the idea behind plans in Asia for so-called super grids, sending power from countries with relatively few people but lots of wind, sun and fossil fuels to distant electricity-hungry population centers trying to keep up with demand. Mongolia, desperate to make more of its abundant resources as it seeks to revive its flailing economy, aims to make that vision a reality through one of the world’s most ambitious .