Japan Fights Heat Tooth and Nail—But Not With A/C

Tokyo cooks up stigma against energy waste
By Jonas Oransky,  Newser Staff
Posted Sep 11, 2007 4:08 PM CDT
Japan Fights Heat Tooth and Nail—But Not With A/C
A model, who is an employee of Mitsukoshi department store, displays men's summer wear during a "Cool Biz" fashion show at the department store in Tokyo Friday, June 1, 2007. Marking the launch of the annual "Cool Biz" campaign Friday to encourage more casual business wear to cut energy usage, the...   (Associated Press)

The Japanese are waging a painful war against energy consumption, meeting summer needs not with air-conditioning but with business casual clothing and a good dose of grinning and bearing it. The 2-year-old Cool Biz movement, which aims to keep office temperatures at 82 degrees, took off in earnest this summer, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The eco-conscious country has taken Cool Biz to heart. A hotline allows whistleblowers to rat out abusers, and cooling pads and desk fans are catching on. The movement has opponents—a spokesman for an A/C manufacturer calls 82 "an energy-saving environment—not a human environment"—but many cling to Japan’s ingrained formality, refusing to shed suits and ties. (More Japan stories.)

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