JPRS ID: 9776 JAPAN REPORT

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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9776 S June 1981 Ja an Re ort p p (FOUO 34/81) . F~~$ FOREIGN BROADCAST iNFORMATION SERVICE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 - NOTE .TPRS publications contain information prima.rily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language , sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and - other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are sunplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text) or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parenthESes were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, v iews or at.titudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OW~IERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE O~~TLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9776 8 June 1.9 81 JAPAN REPORT (FOUO 34/81) CONTENTS POLITICAL Suzul:i May Find It Hard To Up Defense Spending (Yoshio Matsui; THE DAILY YOMIURI, 19 Play 81) 1 ~ Miserable Seauel to Summit (Minoru Hirano; THE DAILY YOMIURI, 18 May 81) 3 Nakasone's Periphery Becaming Animated . _ (Takehiko Takahashi; MAINICHI DAILY NEWS, 13 May 81)..,......... 5 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY . Various Industrial Fields~Advance Into Robot Ar?a ~ (JAPAN ECONOMIC JdURNAL, 28 Apr S1) 7 Right Secured To Explore Nigerian Uranium (Isao Saotome; JAPAN ECONOMIC JGURNAL, 28 Apr 81) 9 _ More Companies Enter [aord Processor Market (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 28 Apr 81) 10 Personal Computer rfakers Step Up Exports ro Europe (JAPAN EC~ONOMIC JOURNAL, 28 Apr 81) 11 P?EC Gets Most Orders for Digital Exchange Systems ; '(JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 28 Apr 81) 12 Pra::t.ical Power Plant Relying on Sea Wave Drafted (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 28 Apr 81) 13 Engine Pro~ect With United Kingdom To Remain 'Flexible' (JAPAN ECOr10MIC JOURNAL, 12 May 81).......' 14 - a - [III - ASIA - 111 FOUO] FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Institute Assumes Job of Holding Micra~rganisms , _ (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 1~2 May 81)....... 15 Ricoh Makes Pliant Type Liquid Crystal Dispiay (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 12 May 81) 16 MITI Plans Firm for YX Plane Sale (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 May 31) 17 Fokker-Douglas Group Asks To Join Aircraft Development Plan (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 May 81) 18 Plastic Injection Molder Makers in Technological Development Race (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 May 81) 19 Nissho Plans To Commercialize Biomass Studie s in 5 Years . (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL. 19 May S1) 20 New Pigments Found Tc~ Possess High Capacity Long Wave Absorption (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 May 81) 21 Single Mode Fiber Optics Communications (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 MaS~ 81) 22 Local Governments Striving To Foster High Technology Industries (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 May 81) 23 Single Crystals of Metal Carbide New1y Produced (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 19 May 81).......... 25 Brief s Nuclear Spent Fuel Plant 26 Revamping Aluminum Industry 26 Mass-Market of Memory Chips 27 C. Itoh Semiconductor Line 27 Greater Computer Exports ~ 27 Soviet Steel Inspection Mission 28 Optical Long Wavelength System . 28 Carbon Fiber Concrete 28 - b - Fnu n~'r~TAT, USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY POLITICAL SUZUKI MAY FIND IT FIARD TO UP DEFENSE SPENDING Tokyo THE I~P~ILY YOMIURI in English 19 May 81 p 5 - ~Article by Yoshio Matsui~ ~ Tex t~ In the Japan-U3 summit itsel! in the same manner. President Reagan, . as ex- As a result Japan will have pected, strongly pressed to materialize its tsnswer in , Prime Minister Suzuki tor the 8sca1 1082 budget. Japan~se egorts to build up Prime Minister 3uzuki, defense, and 3uzuki seems however, hes promised not to have tacitly promised to to increase taxes in the do so. coming iiscal year. More- Oi course no deflnite S- over, Snancial rehabilita- gures to this end have been tion is a task oi prime im- given. But the U8 is ap- portance for the Suzuki parently confldent that Ja- government. pan will verliy its promise The government plans to by soon deciding upon con- decrease the selling ot gov- crete Sgures. ernment bonds by nearly In iact, Secretary of ~2,OU0 billion lrom th~ cur- 8tate Alexander Haig has rent Sscal year's ~F12,270 bil- said that the U9 has no in- llon. tention o1 pressing Japan � The Flnance' Mlnistrq ten- in tersns oi the delsnse tatively eatimates the short- problem but that he bellev- age oi revenue ior the next ed Japan would voluntarily Sscal year at ~2,700 billion. build up its delense capa- ~ situation will inevitab- city, apparently expecting ly necessitate a decrease in much oi the oSicial-level expenditures. conierence based on the ~e � U3 is nevertheless Japan-U3 securitp treaty urging Japan to increase de- scheduled for June in fense capacity under such Iiawaii. fl~ancial restraints. US newspapers write al- ,~ter rsading the Japan- most with one votce that ~g ioint communique lssued Japan will earnestly tackle ag~r the suma~it, Xoshio the detense buildup task, gakurauchi, secretary-gen- giving iavorable apprecia- eral o! the ruling Liberal- tion to Suzuki s visit to the ~~ocratic Party (LDP), IIs~ said the communiqae did not Just~ over one year has passed since the U8 came signify an instant increase to urge Japan to increase in Japan'3 delense bill. its defense capacity. Japa.n He explained that al- managed to parry the strong though the commnnique ref- US requsst the flrst time, erred to Japan's spontane- But this qear it will be dif- ous eSorts to build up de- Scult !or Japaa to behave fense capability, this refer- ence meant the defense 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY buildup program would be g~geo Nagano, president tackle3 in consideration of or the Japatt Chamber o! Japan's flnancial situ ition. Commerce and Industry Is the problem so easy? ~Nissho), says that it is ne- Such an eacuse that Japan cessary tor Japan to in- would like to postpone the crease defense costs ~to defense capability buildup some extent as there are because oi the d181cu1t state few other countries whose of Snances will not be look- defense expenditures go be- ed upon lavorably by the low one percent oi the ~s� gross ' national product In lact, top officials of the ~Q.plp~, Finance Ministrv are em- Tadashi Sasaki, chairman barrassed by this factor oi the board oi directors oi which is certain to increase ~e Japan Committee for delense spending. Economlc Development (Kei- F'inance M~inister Michio y~ ~yukai), shares trie - Watanabe is so sen~itive to same opinion by saying that this problem that he said Japa.n should make deiense he would like to pay iull efforts as much as posaible. consideration to this isaue But oppositioa parties because deiense is iunda- stand against the joint com- mental to the state. munique. Hut ranking o8fclals ot Tamio Kawakami, director the aiinistry remain cauti- 'ot the intemational a8airs ous, saying that preferen- bureau of the Sociallst Par- tial treatment c' defenae tq (JSP), crlticizes the com- allocations will spark de- munique by saying that an mands for similar consider- ~~~~e in Japan's defenae ation oi welfare and educa- capabilitq threatiena to ~ake tion lunding, depleting Japan invoived in U8 world state coSers much as a strategy, and that taking a small leak will sink even a turn toward becoming a big ship. ' militarq gtant is danqerous. In Japan defense costs Upon his return from the have , been treated equally U8, Premies 3uzuki reported with weliare spending. to the Diet and wlll now Hence, there arises the resume the task of com- question of whether it is Piling next flscal year's , possible to give defense budget. costs special treatment. Suzuki will flnd it di8i- _ The business community, cult to treat the defense which strongly insists on cost increase issue as he cuts in expenditures, is aLso has repeateiily stated that somewhat embarrassed. But he would not pertnit any it appreciates that US de- ~~avpritism or exception. In mand, as Japanese industry tl~s, sense the complication supports increased defense of~the flscal 1982 budget has measures. run into an obstacie. (:~)FYRIGHT: DAILY YOMIURI 1981 CSU: l?120 I . . 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY POLITICAL MISERA,BLE SEQUEL TO SUI~AZCT Tokyo THE DAILY YOMIURI in English 18 May 81 p 2 ~BEHIND THE SCENES article by Minoru Hirano: '~Miserable Sequel to Suma?it"~ ~Text~ The disagreement between Prlme Minis- The fact was that the Foreign Ministry ter Suzuki and the Foreign Ministry over offlcial did not criticize the prime minister ways to explain the word "Alllance" in the ~ such a strong language. Japan-US joint communique developed into Within the Liberal-Democratic Party, resignations oi Foreign Minister Ito and criticista arose that the prime miiaiater's Foreign Vice-Minister Masuo Takashima explanation sounded like an eucuse, that 3aturduy. 3lmultaneous resignations of the hz paying too much deference to the foreign minister and ioreign vice-minister pubHc opinion and that he should speak were unprecedented in postwar Japan. out trankly. What ttxis incident revealed wa a tihat geca.u~e Su~ -,~i at the Washington press the word "alliance" which has a re.:iitary con?erence ga~e an "insufficient" explana- overtone was tuo strong to the Japanese tion, as he acknowledged later, he found accustomed to peace Por 38 qears aPter the ~~lt labeled a timid and incompetent war and that both 3uzuki and the Forelgn leader oi Japan. ' Ministry had underestimated the danger Suzuki, however, would lose face if he of using the word in a ioint comuiunique. reversed his previous remarks aiter being The trouble originated when 3uzukl told criticized. Fie must show o8 his authority a press conference immediately after the over the Forei~n Ministry. Accordingly, at Japan-US summit in Washington that the a cabinet meeting Friday, he criticized the word "alliance" was without a military Foreign Ministry for the way the text o! connotation. He gave this explanation in the joint communique was written by For- order to assure the nation that he had eign Ministry o8lcials, He said: "The core given no new military commitment to the ar a joint communique must be the sum- U3 bq using this word, but the explanation ~t itself and a~oint communlque which sounded unnatural and invited suspicion does not contain what was discussed at that he was withholding something. the summit is not good. The way to pre- On Maq 12, after 3uzuki and his entour- pare a ioint communique should be ahang- , age returned to Japan, a top P'orelgn Min- ed" istry o8icial gave a supplementary ex- However, the ioint communique issned planation that there was no alliance which this time had been executed and released dld not involve national securlty and that the prior approval of the prime min- the prime mtnister only meant to say that ister hlmselP. It was unreasonable for him the milltarq aspect did not constitute the ~~d fault with the joint communique core oi the Japan-U6 alllance. uiter its issuance. It was reported that Ito But a certain newspaper reported that had been prompted to resign by his resent- this Foreign Mlnistry official had. frankly ~ent at this remark by the prime minister. _ criticized the prime minister by saytng that Japan loses its internatlonal trust ii a an alliance which did not include military prime minister finds lault with a joint relations was nonsense. Most other news- ~~unique issued on the basis o! accord papers also reported that the dlsagreement ~th the head o! state oi the other coun- between the prime minister and the For- try. We can inPer that Ito by resigning eign Ministry over ways to interpret the tried to lodge a protest with the prime word had surlaced. . , 3 ; FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 F'OR OFFIC'IAt. USE ONLY minister who dces not understand such fuadamentals oi diplomacy. As a result, public symPathy gces to Ito and Takashima and public criticlsm cen- ters on Su2uk1 who lacks ability to lead, the diplomatlc common sense and wisdom � to size up the international situation. This incident is an unhappY affair for Japanese diplomacy. The Foreign Ministry - at the outset o! this year said that policy adiustme~xt `vith the Reagan administra- tion was the moat important diplomatic task for Japan in 1981. And no sooner than the Japan-U8 summit between Suzu1~ and the new president realized than did the ' discord within the Japanese C3overnment over ways to explafn a word in the ioint communique lead to the restgnations oi the two top officials o! the F`?~reign lvilnis- try. Then, all the eSorts by the Fbreign Ministrq to pave the way for the Japan-US summit have gone to naught. ' The word "alliance" was used in the joint communique at strong urging o! Lhe US. The US in excessive zeal to urge Japan to upgrade its defense capability vlctimized the two top men in the Japanese Foreign Ministry. T1ie US should be more cautious in makfn6 requests with Japaa hereaiter. COPYRIGHT: DAILY YOMIURI ,1981 cso: 4i2o , , , FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY POLITICAL NAKASONE'S PERIPHERY BECOMING ANIMATED Tokyo MAINICHI LIAILY NEWS in English 13 Ma.y 81 p 2 rArticle by Takehiko Takahashi~ - ~Text~ The periphery of Director could not resist. This was General Yasuhiro Nakasone of because the leaders of the t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Liberal-Democratic Party's l~tanagement Agency has biggest factions, the Tanaka suddenly become animated of and Fukuda tactions, supported ~aNakasone has been elected to Suzuki. ' the Diet 14 times, the same EnteTS CBbinet number as Prime Minister . Nakasone entered the cabinet Zenko Suzuki. Differing from at Prime Minister Suzuki's Suzuki, Nakasone has had long request. Although Nakasone experience as the boss of a had hoped for the fina :e faction. Because of this, he has 'minister's post, a balance with . been regarded as the most Toshio Komoto i present promising candidate tor the director general of the premiership. Economic Planning Agency) Nevertheless, the political had to be considered and Prime environment surrounding Minister Suzuki asked Nakasone has not necessarily Nakasone to join the cabinet as been favorable. One reason is 'irector general ot. the Ad- that he is from the same elec= ~inistrative Management - toral district as focmer Prime Agency. Nakasone did so with Minister Takeo Fukuda. the understanding that hi's Nakasone's former boss, Ichiro status would correspond to that Kono, was anti-Eisaku Sato of "deputy prime minister." He ~ former prime minister; now is now busily engaged in deceased) and this greatly promoting administrative , affected lYakasone's political reform. activities. Although Prime :ylinister When Zenko Suzuki became Suzuki has not formally ap- the prime minister after the pointed Nakasone as "deputy sudden death of former Prime prime minister," he has been 1~Iinister Masayoshi Ohira, this , virtually according Nakasone was not resisted by Nakasone. that status. Wtwn Suzuki visited Rather than to say that he did the ASEAN countries, not resist, it might be more Nakasone became "acting � correct to point out that he prime minister." This again 5 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY took place during Suzuki's electoral district ~ Yamanashi Moreover, among the Naiyukai recent visit to the United States. Prefecture?. members. the one standing the When Prime Minister Suzuki Kanemaru and Nakasone met closest to the prerr,ietship at the goes to Western Europe and ~p Tokyo on the night of May present time is none other than also ~vhen he attends the They ~~ked amicably and Nakasone. summit meeting, Nakasone will shook hands three times.~ Under such circumstances. probably again be the "acting Kanemacv said that he would the establishment of the prime minister" as heretot'ore. act in accordance with the Naiyukai means tor Nakasone As these cases accumulate, d~~ion of the Tanaka faction the emergsnce ot a very Nakasone is likely to widen the and if support for Nakasone is favorable condition in alming gap with Director General dectded, then he t Kanemaru> for the premiershlp. Komoto of the Economic will gladly ablde by that Nakasone changed his Planning Agency who has been decision. Nakasone expressed residence on May 5. He has considered as a promising his thanks tor Kanemaru's rented the house that had been candidate for the premiership statement. occupted by Shigeo Nagashima, up to now. pn the same ni t of Ma 7, a former manager of the Giants In order for Nakasone to ceremony to e tablishy the ~ P~ baseball team. ~ ln the assume the reins of ad- past. Nakasone s house had no ministration, he will require the "Nai y ukai," consistin g of Diet place for newspapermen to cooperation of the Tanaka members who formerly served park thelr cars when they faction, the largest and at the . in the former Home 1Viinjstry, ~o~erged there to interview same time most active faction Was held. Although there have him. Moreover, according to a of the LDP. If the Tanaka been several prime ministers fortune teller, the tocmer house faction backs Nakasone in the who tormerly served in the was not "lucky" and if party presidential election next Finance Mlnistry, such as Nakasone stayed in that house. year, the Suzuki administration Hayato Ikeda. Takeo Fuknda he would be "unable to climb to will face a crisis. and Masayoshi Ohlra, there has the top." There is a group in the ~p ~ne from the Minlstry ot After Nakasone moved to his Tanaka faction that has a Home Aftairs. It is perhaps only ~W residence on May 5, it feeling of goodwill toward natural as elite bureaucrats ~ms as it the sun had sud- Nakasone. The toremost that they would like to see a denly started to shine on member of this group is Ship prime minister emerge from Nakasone's periphery. Kanemaru, former director the ranks of the Home Affalrs But how all this will be ltnked general of the Defense Agency. Ministry. , with the premiership will un- One reason far lhis is said to be Naiyukai Member doubtedly depena entirely on that Eiichi Nakao of the the ability of Nakasone himself. N a k a s o n e f a c t i o n a n d Although it was for a short /The wrlter is an adviser to Kanemaru are from the same time. Nakasone served in the the Mainichl Newspapers and Home Affairs Ministry and is formerchietedltorial writerl. thus a member of the Naiyukai. C~P1'RIGHT: Mainichi Dai1y News, 1981 cso: 4i2o 6 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-00850R040440020015-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY VARIOU S INDUSTRIAL FIELDS ADVANCE INTO ROBOT AREA Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL ih English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 pp 1,4 [ Tex t] The industrial robot manu- the world in the, fufure. _ j facturing industry lately has Production ~'of industrial j leaped into the spotlight as a robota in JapeR in� entire last i highly promising business and year: reached; a va]Ge of about ~ has been drawing a welter of ~gp bi~lia~. Demand for some ; new entrar~ts from ~div.Crse ~ - - . � . ~ fields. time is expected to grow at an ~ ~ iNhile the pioneers in this annual rate of around 50 per ~ cent. Opinion is strengthening i sector, such as Kawgsaki . that in .1990, th+s. market is ~ Heavy Industries, Ltd., are ~~ng to expand'to a~ale' of ~ consolidating and ex~anding ~ their production structures, � � - i ~ose newly harging into it are fi.~ prospects, not only such big companieg as ~?tMa1 robots, Matsushita Electric IndtBtrial fcotn~ la$t year to this year, Co. and Sumitomo `Heavy have been~pressed with boost- � ~ Industries, Ltd. but "odd ?ng their prodnction capacity. sorts," such as Sailor Pen Ca. ISawasakl HI, the 'biggest and furniture makers. builder of industrial robqts, in ~ In other words, the "rush" is fiscal 1981 plaris to increase its ~ on and market competition is robot pc~oduction by 30 per cent stea2lily intensifying. ~ over that of the preceding fiscal This is because robots having year to slightly over 600 units. functions nearing that of Next . biggest- ~builder is human beings, high efGciency Yaskawa Electric Mfg. Co. I and yet being low priced, suc- which, ey,es doul~ling its oytput cessively aze being developed to ~ around 600 units. Chasing and practicalized, and this has these Big ~ 2 are Hitachi, Ltd., been leading more and more Mits~bishi Heavy Industries, ~ manufacturers to use them. Ltd., Kobe Steel, Ltd. and Already, about 75,000 robots F~jitsu Fanuc, Ltd. ~ ' now are being used in Japan, Ail of the industrial robots slightly over 70 per cent of the made by these firms are high world's market. With growing efficiency versions employing domestic demand as a lever, mini-computera for their oon- the large buliders of robots are trol. However, production' of starNng to grapple fully with t~e robots~ operated simply by - problem of exporting them to manual means also is growing. the U.S. and Europe. . Meantime, newcomers are There are possibilities thus of advancing into this` field itom Japan becoming a base of numerous other seCtor"s=-=clec- supplying industrial robots to 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY tric-electronic machinery, gen- facturing field. sonnel costs going up, nothing eral machinery, stationery Demand for indastrial robots is cheaper than using a robot - equipment and furniture fields. have begun to zoom since the for welding. It is said that if a In the period frnm last year- younger workers tend to shy small and medium enterprise end to this year, Matsushita away from work that dirties the uses a robot in place of a Electric Industrial Co. and hand or which constitute a welder, it can pay back the Mitsubishi Electric Corp. have simple repetition. The com- robot price in less than two started marketing welding panies seeking them thus want years. robots. Nippon Electric Co. to transfer such work from Use of robots thus has been lately has developed an tiltra- human beings to robots. spceading fast from welding, precision robot and intends to The welding field now is said painting, inspection and other commercialize it within the to lack 30,000 welders, and the jobs. The indtLStries which are next year or two. situation reportedly is similar actively using robots chiefly . Sumitomo Heavy Industries for the press and painting are the auto, electric-electronic has revived its robot division fields. . machinery, precision ma- which had been dormant and is R�b�ts can work steadily for chinery and steel industries. intending seriously to grapple 24 hoias without any rnm- This means that robots are with turning out robots. P~~~ ~ to bad environment. beginning to take over indus- 'llie increase in robot demand tries which had supported Okaanura Mf8� Co., a 1~rge ~s come about also from the Japan's international competi- furnit~e maker, has started sharp elevation in their effici- tiveness with their "high actively to solicit orders for a~ ~cy lately from use of mini- quality work-force." robot which it originallY d~- ~~mputers and the big come- It appears certain the time sigs?ed for its own use. of their prices. will come when blue color It is estimated there already A welding robot which in the workers will disappear from old or~ ewband large or small, ~ PASt had a~ice tag of ~ 12-13 _ Japan's factories and th~ "steel competing in the robot manu- ! m~ion now has come down to collar" - robots - will becoine . around ~ 8 million. With per- the principals. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY RIGHT SECURED TO EXPLORE NIGERIAN URANIUM Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 p b [Article by Isao Saotome] [ Te:ct ] ~ PARIS - The Government of plants for one year. Japanese Niger will tikely award engineers of both the Overseas uranium mining rights to the Uranium Resources De4elop~ Power Reactor and Nuclear ment-Co. and International Re- Fuel Development Corp. (PNC) sources are exploring the coun- of Japan for uranium explora- try's uranium resources, with = tion in its national reserve OURD already involved in south of Akouta and Arlit. U.S. production in Akouta. and French companies have ~ been trying to obtain the rights ~ realized, the mining rights to continue their exploration will allow PNC to explore for the atomic fuel in a 5,400- activities. square-kilometer area south of The Niger plan in favor of Akouta, The two parties will PNC is intended to avoid the work out the details, with PNC excessive presence of the U.S. likely to put up the cnsts for. and F~ance in the country's activities from exploration to uranium hunt efforts. It is also production. The produced ura- believed that Niger will use the nium will be split between. concession to strengthen the Niger and PNC. general economic ties between Niger and Japan. As a PNC source commented � Niger is believed to possess ~n France, the award of the about the richest urani~n ~~Bh~ has yet to be finalized. reserves of all producing coun- He added t~at the reserve looks tries. In 1980, the two existing promising even though . at- 6elds = Akouta and Arlit - tempts will have to be made to produced 3,300 tons of uranium, ~termine possible uranium equivalent to a volume good for dePosits. PNC and Niger will running 10 1�million-kilowatt ~isctiss the "content" of an exploratian pact. COPYRIGHT: ~581, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 � 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICiAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MORE COMPANIES ENTER WORD PROCESSOR MARKET Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 p 9 [Text] Competition is intensifying in means for the sacalled "office ' the Japanese word processor automation" in the future. market as new entries are con- However, the probtem is that spicous. unlike the English language Nine makers now. are in the which features only the al- market. They are six computer phabet in writing, the Japanese builders tToshiba Corp., Ni~r Ianguage has 51 kana sylla- pon Electric Co., Fujitsu Ltd., baries and thousands of kanji Oki Electric ~ Indust~y+ Co., (Chinese characters). Because Hitachi, Ltd. and Mitsubishi of this complexity, these pra Electric Corp.), two office ducers employ different input equipment makers (Sharp methods, including the kanji .Corp. and Canon, Inc.) and a tablet method, the interactive communications equipment kana-kanji conversion method maker cMatsushita Communi- and the two-stroke mnemonic cation Industrial Co.). And, code input method. Ricoh Co., a Tokyo office The best setling.models thLLs equipment maker, is going to are expected to determine the enter the market as the lOth input method in the future. This supplier. is stimulating makets to vie for - Demand for Japanese word larger sh_~res while the market processors has been rising as is still you..g. they are regarded an efficient COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ,:tr`i, _ ..`.v t~ .._~..:r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PERSONAL COMPUTER MAKERS STEP UP EXPORTS TO EUROPE Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 p 9 [ Text ] Japanese personal computer F1~ance and West Germany makers have been stepping up through its office equipment exports of their products to marketing agents. "Japanese major European countries. makers now deprive U.S. sup- Some of them are now eyeing pliers of their European cus- . the U.S., a still uncultivated tomers," said a Sharp spokes- market for Japanese personal man. computer builders. Sord Computer System Inc., As. the quality of Japanese- a Tokyo personal computer ~ made products is highly rated builder-distributor which in Europe and the U.S., exports recently set up an assembly to these ind~strialized nations, plant in lreland, plans to are expected to gain momen- market ~ 3,600 units in Europe � tum in the near future. this year. In the European market, in Logic Systems International particular, local makers and Inc. of Tokyo also is working importers of American models out a new strategy to boost already have been getting ner- exports. The company now vous over the steadily rising. delivers more than 350 units a~ market share of Japanese- month to the European market. made personal computers. - These Japanese makers now Sharp Corp. seems the most are paying close attention to aggressive toward exports the U.S., the world's largest among Japanese makers. The computer market.' Osaka company plans to boost Sharp started shipments of shipments of its MZ-80 Series PC�300p Series personal com- personal computers to Europe puters to the U.S. in late Fetr to more than 25,00o units in the ruary in the hope of marketing current 1981 business year from more than 5,000 units this year. . about 15,000 units in the preced- Nippon Electric Co. (NEC) ing year, ended March 31. plans to start exporting per- Sharp markets them mainly in sonal computers to the U.S. ~ during fiscal 1981. 1VEC is now consolidating its marketing networks in the U.S. for the planned sales of personal com- puters. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL iJSE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY NEC GETS MOST ORDERS FOR DIGITAL EXCHANGE SYSTIIrIS Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 p 9 ' [Text] Nippon EIectric Co. (NEC) The first, ~igital electronic so expensive as ko account for recently scored the world's telephone switching system to about half the cost of each set. highest volume in bookings of be sold in the world was that of Besides, the key to the tech- international orders for digital Northern Telecom Ltd. of the nological reflnernent of such electronic telephone switch U.S. This took place in th~ U.S. systems is said to lie in the systems. market in 1976. It has been capacity to make good LSI According to the top Tokyo picked up by various indepen- circuits. Having attained the telecommunication equipment � dent American telephone com- World's second highest place in maker, its recent receipt of a panies. ' that capacity, NEC is believed Malaysian order for such a NEC started a drive to sell its to be decidedly more compefi- system for 1,670,000 circuits own NEAX61 series in the U.S. tive in such international sys- brought to 3,260,000 the total of in October, of ' the following tem sales than Northern Tele- circuits for atl such systems year. Since landing the Cirs~ com, L.M. Ericsson, or CIT and internationally ordered from American order for the series 'I'homson-CSF, both of E'rance, 1VEC since it started selling from Continental Telephone now its principal rivals. ~ such systems outside Japan in Corp. in May, 1979, NEC has NEC President Tadahiro October,1977. listed a succession of follow-up ~wmoto believes that~ NEC This meant NEC reportedly orders from other independent has secured the world s top has surpassed in such volume U.S. telephone utility Ccros. leadership in such system sales Sweden's Telefonaktiebolaget In addition, - NEC has also With little fear of losing it in the �L.M. Ericsson, hitherto boast- won orders for its own systems foreseeable future. ing the world's largest order from 13 other countries - Japan's own market for such volume of 2,ZOQ,000 circui~s. Brazil, Argentina, New Zea- systems is expected to start The digital etectronic tele- land, Colombia, Syria, Sri BI'owing soon because Nippon phone switch devices ace the Lanka, Iraq, Puerto Rico, T~legraph & Telephone Public mainstay of today's highly 'Irinidad .and Tobago, India, Corp. is to introduce such sophisticated computerized Brunei, Egypt, and, this time, systems into its expanding data communication and or� Malaysia. � digital data communication dinary telecommunication In producing such systems, service. NEC is thus getting systems. semiconductors are said to be ready to capture the leadership of the domestic market as well. COPYRIGHT: 1981, Tt+;: Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSo: -~120 12 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHIdOLOGY PRACTICAL POWER PLANT RELYING ON SEA WAVE DRAFTED Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 p 15 [Text] Hitachi Shipbuilding & E ineering Co has c~aRed a available as the electricity- ~B generating energy, the com- blueprint of what will be a peny has rated its proposed practical sea wave-energy moderate-size plant's generat- ; electric power plant. ing capacity at 28 kilowatts at i Harnessing the sea's enerBY the most and 20 at the norinal ~ potentials, inclucfing wave and level. tide-flow forces and tempera- ~~e plant will feature a 3- i ture difference between meter-high, 4-meter wide ~ shallow and deep waters, has swinging blade�shaped sleel I long been studied in Japan. tward pushing out like a fighting But, according to the Osaka S~eld into the waters from a i company, its prospective breckwater or an embankment. i coasial wave-Eorce power . i plant, if realized, wotild be the ~ncoming and retreating ~ first of its kind in Japan to be waves swing the plate, and the ~ applied to practical electric movements aze transmitted power generating purposes� through cylinders and ail-filled I 'I~ie top~rate shipbuilding and hydraulic pipings to a turbine ~ machine engineering company ~d generator built into the completed the blueprint with breakwater or embankment. the cooperation of the Muroran 'I'he company has started University of Technology in looking for a proper place to Hokkaido. build the ~rst demonstration Basic sea wave force data model of the plant. were gathered at a Japan Sea Considering the rather small coastal town of Hokkaido, capacity and geographical known as one of the world's location of its proposed plant, roughest wave-hit sea shores. the company envisions it as a j The data were closely power source for powering analyzed and reproduced in ex- ~ lighthouses, melting snow on ! perimental tanks to find out waterfronts, and heating fish what kind of generator would farm water. be the beact to run at a uniform _ Such a power plant may be ' pace between the rough and still five times as costly as the ' calm weathers, especially be- _ conventional oil-fueled tween wintei an.d summer. equivalent, but the company Estimating ~n average of sees a long-range development only about 15 per cent of all potential of the urilimited wave rounds of wave force to be energy. I COPYRIGHT : i981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. ~ CSO: 4120 13 ~ FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ' ENGINE PROJECT j~ITH UNITED KINGDOM TO REMAIN 'FLEXIBLE' Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 May 81 p 5 [Text] q~~nt project between three capacity to meet demancts Japanese companies and Ro11s- concerning both classes of Royce Ltd. of Britain to ~ sircraft. ~ develop a new jet engine for But as a practical matter, medium civilian transport Japanese experts concerned planes is bPing modiEied,by the the XJB project are Japanese sid~ for economy of ~isualiiing two models of such development ~^.ost, it was engine - an RJs00-25 and an recently learned. ~ RJ500-35-, respectively with 'il~e Japanese - IswkaWa' thrusts of about 9.5 and 11.3 jima-Harima Heavy Industries tons. , Co., Kawasaki Heavy Indus- %~e Japanese side had tries, Ltd., and Niitsubishi W~t~ the li~ter-du'ty engine geavy Industries, G.d. - pre- ~~a~e they had envisioned ferred an engine for a 13o- ~es of such engine for new seater plane and Rolls-Royce 1~.s~~r class civilian air- for a 150-seater :~:~t~en they tentatively came to an agree- craEt series expected to be ment on the jou~t RJ500 sezies developed by many aircraft engine development project at makers, including the Boeing the end of 1979. Co., during tt?e first half of this Eventually, a compromise decade. . was reached that the high pres- ' But sorne Japanese observers sure�icrvolving section of the have fig~ued that during the engine, chiefly to be produced second half, only 1,000 units of by the Rolls-Royce side, be such new tranaports will be cies;~ed to match the 150- sold, but thrice as many, ~u~its seater class plane demandg, of larger 150-seater class ones tx~t the Japanese side also � will be in demand. However, develop an applied lighter-dutY the Japanese side has had to version of the engine to meet prevent expansion of its cosl the 13o-seatec class transport burden of ~70 billion chalf tn engine demands. 'Phe ultimate be government�subsidized) by product will be o[ a versatile avoiding two parallel develop- � ment jobs. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 14 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 I FOR OFFICIAL l1SE ONLY ~ i SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY i ~ INSTITUTE ASSUMES JOB OF HOLDING MICROORGANISMS ~ Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 May 81 p 9 ~ The Govemment's Fer- Last autumn, the institute [Text] mentation Research Insti- created a special center for tute at Tsukuba started reception of all requests for working, as of May 1, as one preservation of such I of the world's three deposi- specimens, whether foreign I tories of living micro- or domestic. ; organism specimens to be Domestically, it had ! involved in applications for already been such a deposi- ! international patents on all tory of long standing, now biotechnologies, . including keeping about 6,000 stocks of pharmaceutical ones con- microorganisms in its care cerning new kinds of anti� under Japan's own patent biotics. law and system. Having now - The national institute has become an international been internationally chosen organ, its specimen preser- by the patent authorities of vation facilifies are na- all advanced nations to be turally expected to become the world's third presti~o~ short nf space and equip- I depository after the first two ment. ~ in the U.S. for keeping such A quick expansion is j microorganisms alive and ~W being azranged for, j intact for long periods under especially because ali sorts the so-called Budapest of revolutionary biotech- Treaty of 1977. The interna- nology for producing wonder tional patent treaty to ~gs, foodstuffs, new fuel simplify and unify hitheMo sources and industrial ma- nationally-divided and terials have become , a troublesome patent-seeking worldwide scientific-indus- procedures took effect last trial boom. summer. The Budapest Treaty has Every depository so done away with the past named and trusted is obli- irksome requirement when gated to keep every micro- seeking patents in more organism specimen placed than one country on any new in its care alive and well idea or process concerning zoo-style for at least 30 microorganisms to deposit a years if the application con- specimen concerned with cemed goes through and the patent authorities of draws patent on the idea or each country. Under the new process represented by the treaty, it will be sufficient to application. In case of an deposit such a specimen in unsuccessful application, enY one of the international the deposit is returned. depositories. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon K;~izai Shimbun, Inc. CSO : 4120 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY RICOH MAKES PLIANT TYPE LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 May 81 p 9 ( Text ] Ricoh Watch Co. of Nagoya According to the company, ' recently announced the crea- its "PP-LCD" ( polyester film tion of a p~lyester film version - liquid crystal display) ~ of the conventional glass panel capsule has been developed - capsule of electronic liquid through its technological in- crystal display . devices, novations, including 1) forma- promising numerous advan- tion of a thin transparent elec- tages over the glass panel type. troconductive layer on poly- According to the timepiec~ ester filming by vacuum vapor producing subsidiary of Ricoh deposition of a tin oxide-indium Co. of Tokya, Japan's top-rate (an oxide alloy), 2) creation of business machine and camera a special chemical to keep the maker, its nea+ plastic product molecular arrangement (struc� ~ promises, above all, bendabil- ture) in liquid crystals in a ity and crack or shatter-proof given fixed direction and 3) at- tensility against shocks, two taining complete uniformity in things impossible to expect the thicimess of the space from the glass cases. wherein a given liquid crystal Now widely applied to elec- is enclased. tronic watches, calculators The company envisions, that ~ and other indicating devices, its P~-LCD capsule, compared liquid crystals change their with the glass type, could molecular structure momen- promise thinning of standard- tarily and ia different degrees size electronic watch or pocta- through twisting caused by ble calculator display panels electric current and thus work from between 1.4 and 2 milli- as an indicating instrument meters to only 0.55 mm, lighten- when enclosed in a flat glass ing the weigtit by moze than 90 capsule with electric terminals. per cent and lowering the pro- In addition to its two unique duction cost by 75-83 per cent, advant~ges, the new plastic en- Even the thinnest existing casing ensures a great reduc- watch could be made still 30 to tion in the weight and thickness 40 per cent thinner and benda- and a more than 70 per cent ble accordi~ to the curve of lowering of the production cost the wrist. Unbceakable auto- compared with its glass coun- mobile dashboard indicators terpart. could also be produced. The company has recently in- Japan, now producing more troduced its new technological than 100 million LCD indicators achievement at a New York per year, commands an 80 per congress of the Society for In- cent-pl~ share of the world's formation Displays. markets for such indicators. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 16 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OF'F'ICIAL USE QNLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MITI PLANS FIRM FOR YX PLANE SALE Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 pp 1,4 [Text] The Ministry of Internationa! non�profit association - Civil -The mission of Nihon 'h~ade & Ind~stry intends to 1'ransport Development Corp. Aeroplane Manufacturing has have three ma jor plane which had spearheaded come to an end. fuselage makers form the core developing the YX, will devote In other words, MITI feels of a new rnmpany for under- itsdi to developme~ of a"New that such plane buildin~ has taking mass production-sales of YX" (civil airliner succeeding reached a new phase, and the Japan's u~and-coming ~ civil theYX). aircraft industry has to be airliner, dubbed the YX. _ ' At the same time, Nihon fostered as a typical Future in- The key makers aze Mit- Aeroplane Manufacturing~ Co., dustry for the nation in con- subishi Heavy Industries, Ltd, which had tmderfaken produc� sidering the high technology Kawasaki Heavy Industries, tion and sales of the YSll, Ja- needed for it and its ripple ef- Ltd, and Fuji Fieavy Ind~tries. � pan's first pastwar t~bojet fects on other industries. - MTTI has revealed hope of inedlum passen8er sirlin~r, As to adjusting the sircraft seeing such a new company wi11 be abolished in fisca11982, industry's structure, feeling is shape up by the autumn of 1982. The reasons for MITI moving strong within the Government It is part of the Ministry's out to adjust and bolster Ja- and the aircraft business that policy for rnnsolidating and pan's aircraft indtatry are: for raising Japan's aircraft in- strengthening the development, -The tri-natioa project dustry to the level of those in production and sales setup for among Japan, the U.S. and the U.S. and Europe, there is the plane. . Italy to develop the YX plane urgency to set up a machinery In other words, the new Cu~m 1200-seat class Boeing 767) has for mutually promoting wiU be for handling the produc- passed the stage of development cooperation among those con- tioa-sales phase. and making a prototype, and cerned and harmonizing their Along with this; the private now is due to advance to mass plans, rather than taking production from the fall of 1982. measures for individual firms. -Full-scale development of The plan to form a new com- the "New YX" of 150-seat class pany stems from such thinking, is set to start also from fiscal and the aircraft industry re- 1982. ' portedly is virtually in agree- ment with MITI's aim. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO : 4120 17 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFIC[AL [,'SE~ONLY 5CIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY FOKKER-DOUGLAS GROUP ASKS TO JOIN AIRCRAFT DEVELOPMENT PLAN Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 8 ~Text~ Board Chairman F. Swart� ~ put ~into service in the middle of touw of the Netherlands' the 1980s. The new YX is a Fokker B.V. has asked Japan follow-up to the YX plane to join the plan of his company ~Boeing 767? now being devel- and America's McDonnell op~ jointly by Japan, the U.S. Douglas Corp. to develop, and Italy: ~ produce and sell a new 150-seat Fakker, which repeatedly aircraft, MDF-100, under equal ~d ~~sted Japan to develop partnership, government ~e new YX with Boeing Corp. sources here revealed last on a troika basis, suddenly '~esday. gave up this idea in favor of Swarttouw made the request teaming up with McDonnell to the Ministry of International D~ug~as~in early May, Trade & Industry andJapanese In briefing the Japanese side aircraft makers during his stay op ~e latest tie with McDonnell in Tokyo on May 8 and 9. He D~gias, Swarttouw strongly ~ flew to Tokyo only several days Wanted Japan Co join the after his company's announc~ Fokker-Douglas plan. He said ment that it would form a joint ~e project will start at the end venture company with MeDon- of this year or early next year. nell Douglas to develop the ~F_l~ Japan will thus have to select While calling for Japan's partners for its new YX scheme participation as an equal -from among Boeing, the partner, Swarttouw showed Fokker-Douglas group, and readiness to have Japan Airbus Industrie S.A., a consor- develop and manufacture im- tium of four European enter- ~portant parts of the 1VmF-100. pri'ses. He also expressed the hope.to Both MITI and the industry eQuip th~ plane with the jet aPP~~ inclined to collaborate . engine RJ500 to be developed wilh Boeing as of the presenG ' jointly by Japan and Britaids Their only apprehension about _ Rolls-Royce, Ltd. this case is that Bceing will The Fokker head's approach certainly have the initiative. coincides with Japan's interna- Conversely, equal partnership tional scheme to develop a next in the Fokker-Douglas venture, generation civilian transport as stressed by Swarttouw, may plane, called the new YX, prove an attraction for the - having 150 seafs, which will be Japanese side. . COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 18 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PLASTIC INJECTION MOLDER MAKERS IN TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT RACE Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 8 [ Tex t] A fierce technolo~cal and attain mass manufac- development race has ture next year. Thus, joint started among plastic injec- efforts to develop injection tion molding machine molders are expected to makers here to develop new spread. types of molders in anticipa- p~oneer Electronic last tion of rapid growth of the year established its own , video disc and digital audio system to mass-produce an disc fields. optical home type of video A video disc injection ~sc, and Sony Corp. is molder has already been preparing to start similar commercialized by Meiki mass manufacture. i Co., and two of them recent� Such discs have to be . ~ ly were delivered to Pioneer made from some acrylic ~ Electronic Corp. More or- resin at micron level of i ders are likely because _ Pioneer Electronic is plan- Precision. No conventional ~ ning to double its monthly m~�ng p~~sl machine can ~ video disc production dosuch a job. ; capacity to 200,000 units be- ~ ~ fore the year-end. New kinds of injection i As for digital audio disc moiders for such precision i injection molders, Nissei plastic are thus wanted. Plastic Industrial Co. and Demands for such ~ Toshiba 1~Iachine Co. dis- moiders to make digital closed recently they were audio discs of PCM type are i rchnologically certain now likely to be even greater to develop inspection than those for video discs molders for making digital because all Japanese audio discs of pulse code record-praiucing acoustic ' modulation type. makers are trying to The digital audio disc develop their own PCM acoustic manufacturers are digital audio discs. The in- likely to start sample pro- jection molder makers' race duction of PC:~I digital audio is thus likely to keep grow- discs before this year-end ing hotter. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 19 FOR OFEICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY NISSHO PLANS TO COA4IERCIALIZE BIOMASS STUDIES IN 5 YEARS Tokyo JAPAN.,ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 17 [Text] Nissho Iwai Corp. of Osaka Concerning the fermentation recently disclosed that it has type of alcohol, the corporation launched a full-scale drive to has already started a s~vey all sorts of promising feasibility survey in the U.S. to . studies, both at home and build a first factory. As for the abroad, conceraing develop~ Australian plant oil, the cor- ment of biomass. ' poration has received a joint According to the corporation development proposal from an (lmown as Nissho-Iwai Co. until Australian enterpcise and is recently), the idea is to develop planning to commercialize a a new bt~siness line by com- prospective production method mercializing every new in Japanese territory. It is now ' promising biomass study, having the method developed in initially in three presently Japan. ~ important areas of such re~ The company expects full search. They are: 1) production commerciallzation of such of the fermentation type of al- biomass utillzation studies in cohol, such as through fer- the next five years. As soon as menting waste sugar ref'uiing any such method is developed molasses or some kind of to the commerclalizable point, starch, 2) productioa of the the company plans to start its cellulose separation type of production investments, alcohol through chemical acquisition of patent rights, and separation of cellulose in developing markets concerned. pasture grass or other plants The new drive of the com- and 3) production of a plant pany launched witn a special type of oil lpossibly a substitute pcoject promotion team with for petroleum) in the form of a many kindg of experts means vegetable wax, so far con� the company will join the sidered a substitute for whale already ~owing competition oil, from a certain Australian earlier started among other � species of plant. Japanese trading companies. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 20 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY NEW PIG,IENTS FOUND TO POSSESS HIGH CAPACITY LONG WAVE ABSORPTION Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 17 [Text] Two new kinds of organic Coming in a thin Cilming pigment of the merceyanine form, the two varieties of group oF dyestuff materials organic pigment, each of a long created by the governmental chain alkyl base type with 18 Research Institute for Poly- carbon molecules, are original- mers and Textiles relative to ly put in an acid solution and development of a good solar cell tested with a xenon lamp material have proved to standing for the sunlight. increase 30 times in sunlight ~ that case, they chiefly absorbency when processed absorb shorter wavelength with alkali. lights. According to the institute, But when the solution is which comes under the Agency steadily switc[~ed to a neutral of Industrial Science & Tech- ~d then a series of thicker nology, its research is part of a ~kaline solutions, they pick up current brisk worldwide series an increasingly stronger capa- of studies to produce a new cit tb absorb lon er wave- kind of solar battery or hydro- length lights. g gen generator by utilizing the capacities. of some kinds of Untimately, they come to organic pigments to turn light acquire, in terms of the density into electricity. The institute of electric current they produce had already succeeded in by absorbing such lights, a developing a hydrogen genera- capacity to generate 2 micro- tor of the kind by creating elec- amperes per ' square centi- trodes out of . some type of ineter, 30 times their original merocyanine group pigments. condition in an acid solution. The sunbeam consists mostly The presumed reason is the of longer wavelength lights, formation of a certain pigment and the new kinds of organic~ molecule association, a neat pigment the institute has combination of several such develop~d absorb these longer molecules, here and there in an wavelength lights. alkaline condition. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. C50: 4120 21 FOR OFFICIAL USE UNLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ' SINGLE MODE FIBER OPTICS COMMUNICATIONS Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 11 [Text~ ' Vippon Telegraph & Tele- The single mode type is far its recent attainment of a stage ~ phone Public Corp. ciVTT) may more preferable because it is to start shortly a full-scale become the first in the world to four to 12 times as large in series of field testing with its practicalize both the multiple information carrying capacity experimentally-completed ~ mode and single mode types of as the multiple mode type and single mode fiber communica- fiber optics communication much smaller in the loss' of tion system. As for the mWtiple system. light energy during the light mode fiber type of such system, According to NTT, it plans to ~S~ge. NTT is already getting ready to start its public comm~mication ~~e case of a 1.3-micron open its regular public com- service early next year, and by long wave band laser light- munication service early next t987 or 1988 respectively with transmitking line, it will need a Year, with two information- the two types of optical fiber midway light booster only once , hauling capacities - 32 million communication. bits (480 circuits in tele one The multiple mode type, every 20 kilometers, compared terms) a second and 100 miWon _ already well developed in tech- '~'ith 15 for the multiple mode bits (1,440 circuits) a second. nological, if not practical, types and 1.5 for the wire and terins features many different cable lines. The single mode The SO-kilometer long field ways or patterns of each light type will be especially valuabie testing line between western in massive communications be- Tokyo and a neighboring flash passage through a slender, rween big cities. prefecture, part of which has fiber line. But development of a good already been built and put to Each flash hits the inner wall single mode type had long been trial, will be tested until 1984, of the line and is reflected to ~fficult due to such technologi- ~d a year or two of commer- ~ the opposite wall. All light ~1 problems as how to ensure cialization tests will follow. flashes thus runs through the a lorig service life of the light NTT has beea receiving line by the aid of the repeated source (a laser diode), produce many Western calls for its reflections. The smaller the such fine fiber lines, and technological cooperation. diameter of the line, the less connect such fibers or such British Minister of Industry ��ill be the number of modes fibers and the laser. Kenneth Baker, when in Tokyo wtil about 10. microns across recentl ro osed a oint Ja- when there will be only a single NTT obviously has solved all Y~ P P J~ mode. such problems as indicated by pan-British research con- cerned to NTT. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The ~lihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL [.'SE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY LOCAL GOVERNMENTS STRIVING TO FOSTER HIGH TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRIES Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 17 (Textj Many prefectural and muni- '11ie authorities of the prefec- cipal administrations and their ture of Osaka, wherein indt~� . industrial experiment stations tries are concentrated in and - are trying to redevelop their around the City af Osaka, be- local industries by introducing lieved the local industries which advanced - or high-technology are 'overly inclined to the . - industries. production of intermediate Their common reasoning is: industrial materials will have -Such industries, notably to be reformed to bring a re- - including Japan's growing development of the whole electro-mechanical industries, regional economy by "building aze environmentaliy healthy, new urban types of industry _ non-polluting. types, and more- throughout our prefecture." , over, capable of absorbing Electro-mechanical drive much surplus labor force. Kawasaki City is preparing -'Ihey also promise wide- to invite lazge-scale advances ranging good side-effects of of microprocessor and related levelling up the general local manufacturing enterprises. industrial technologies. 'I1~is will be part of the city's _ ambitio~s plan to develop into -They are credited with a an "electro-mechanical indus- high potential to develop into trial metropolis," popularly tomorrow's mainstay indus- known as a"microcomputer tries of Japan to supersede the city." From before the start, on steel, automobile, and other last April 1, of fiscal 1931, its existing leaders. administration has been study- The administration of Kawa- ing all sorts of possible effects saki City, adjoining Tokyo, is a of such invitation on the exist- typical instance of the new ing local industries in a tie-up regional industrial drives. with the Japan Microcomputer Kawasaki authorities say, Industry Association. "Continued activation of the Lacationing, proper scale - local economy over a long deciding, and other problems of range will be impossible the prospective invited enter- without inviting some high- pcises are to be answered, and technology cpioneering) indus- an official program is to be tries and bringing them established during the year for together with the already starting the invitations im- established local industries into mediately. a new combined spearhead of Similar moves have been the regional economic growth." launched since April 1 by the prefectural administrations of 23 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL L'SE ONLY Osaka, Yamaguchi. � Aichi, created a.research panel on ' Hiroshima and Shizuoka. invitation of 16 kinds of such The Osaka prefectural ad- industry, including micro- ministration will check with all processor and h~^~hemical, and such industries now existing in the possible t?cects of such Japan as to their intentions to invitation on the present local answer its prospective invita- industries, including wood- tions. At the same time, it will working, furniture and textile. spend about a year finding Experiment stations � proper locations in the southern The prefectural industrial . part of the prefecture and experiment stations of Ishi- determining the suitable types kawa and Hiroshima have of industry to enter the region. started their own research and The prefectural administra- investigation projects on local tions of Yamaguchi, Aichi and introduction of electramecha- Hiroshima have likewise nical industries and application started surveys on possibilities of such technology to tradi- of im iting electronic enter- tional local industries. prises into Ube and Onoda The Ishikawa prefectural cities and their environs; all station is organizing an electro- sorts of high-technology in- mechanical research pane~ dustry into the whole prefec- with lceal industrial experts ture; and electronic and and engineering scholars of related enterprises into the Kanazawa University on ihe whole prefecture. applicabilities of electronics to ' Hiroshima authorities have the local machine, handicraft organized a special council of and fermented so.ya bean paste scholars, intellecturals and industries. industriat representatives. ~ The Hiroshima prefectural The prefectural authorities of station (at Kure) is also to Shizuoka last November study such applicability of elec- tronics to local industries. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 24 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL [.'SE ONLY " SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY SI:IGLE CRYSTALS OF METAL CARBIDE NEWLY PRODUCED Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 17 [TextJ a method of producing high� either metallic elements or quality single crystals of inetal carbon when a given baked carbides has been conceived by mass of inetal carbide is a governmental institute. melted tuider a high tempera- The National Institute for Re- ture caused by high frequency searches in Inorganic electric waves by a widely Materials of the Science and lmown "floating zone" procesa Technology Agency said it has to obtain the final single cry- succeeded in producing single stals. crystals of uniform good ~e institute's reserch team qualities. led by Yoshio Ishizawa, It considered this an im� ~~rdinating researcher, has portant stepping stone to devel- improved the process into the oping efficient electron beam ~~titute's own process to attain = discharging devices. the long-missed uniformity. The institute will now ~e secret is to insert either ~ proceed to production of mona crystals of tungsten and other metallic element or carbon metal element carbides, most PoW~rs in between two rods of promising for attaining its metal carbtde to work during research aim to develop such the heating process to sup- devices. plement the loss of the metallic Producing metallic' element element or carbon. The rods . carbide monocrystals of good are rotated and slowly pulled qualities had been considered out; at a rate of only 1 cen- very difficult rat just because timeter an hour, to get the ~aal of the necessity of high tem- monocrystals in bar form, as peratures of well over ~ 3,000 conventionally practiced. , degrees C. but because of the The heating temperature disuniformity in the ratio of thus can be lowered by about metailic elements and carbide a00 degrees C. than hitherto re- contents in the final product. quired to obtain the three kinds The disuniformity results of inetal catbides as referred to from partial evaporation of above in wanted content ratios. COPYRIGHT: 1981, The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120 25 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SC.CCNCF AND TECHNOLOGY ~ BRIEFS NUCLEAR SPENT FUEL PLANT--The Japanese and U.S. Governments have agreed that ' the Power Reactor and Nuclear Fuel Development Corp. should be allowed to ope- rate its nuclear spent fuel plant for another six months. Under the previous agreement, the Japanese Goverinnent's nuclear corporation was to run its plant, rated at 0.7 ton daily, until June 1. The latest agreement encouraged the Tokyo Government to try to have the U.S. remove the current system, in which the plant's operating periods are set by the two Governments. Also, the Government of Prime Minister Suzuki will persuade the Reagan Administration to approve the Japanese ~ plan for building a second spent fuel reprocessing plant besides the experimental plant at Tokai village. President Reagan shows more flexible stand about the U.S. nuclear policy. Japan's current reprocessing operation is bound by the 1977 bilateral agreement. As for the second plant, the nuclear industry intends to set its annual capacity at 6,000 tons, with the fully commercial plant scheduled to be completed by 1990. In exchange for the U.S. approvals, the Washington Government may seek Japanese investment in a nuclear fuel enrichment plant and imports of U.S. reactors. [Text] [Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 May 81 p 4] REVAMPING ALUMINUM INDUSTRY--The Al~inum Industry Council of the Industrial Structure Council, an advisory organ to the International Trade & Industry Min- ister, has begun to reconsider measures to revamp the domestic aluminum smelting industry which has been on the verge of collapse again since last summer's second oil crisis. The council, first of all,.is reconsidering the changes in the environment surrounding.Japan's aluminum smelting industry, the aluminum smelting industry's role in the national economy, the proper production scale - of the industry, and the industry's structural revamping measures. Among the structural revamping measures being considered by the council are reduction in aluminum smelting capacity, energy cost curtailment, measures for stable trans- actions of domestic aluminum ingots, promotion of joint aluminum smelting ven- tures abroad, and technical innovations. According to the council's recommenda- tion in the fall of 1978, the nation's annual aluminum smelting capacity was reduced to 1,110,000 tons by the end of March, 1979 from the previous 1,640,000 tons. The council this time is being compelled to reconsider again the reduced capacity since the second oil crisis has further broadened the price gap between domestic and foreign aluminum ingots. [Text] [Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 Y"!ay 81 p 4] 26 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MASS-MARK~T 0~ MLMOItY CIIIPS--Oki Electric Industry Co is aim:Lng at takir?g the initiative in marketing 64-kilobit dynamic random access memory (RAM) chips. TVie 'fokyo company recently bared a plan to produce 64K dynamic RAMs at a monthly rate of 300,000 from Augus+: ts subsidiary Miyazaki Oki Electric Co in Kiyo- t~ke, Miyazaki Pref, The monthly output volume is double that of Fu~itsu Lim1L-ed and Ear 1.arger than the 50,000-100,000 chips for Nippon Electric Co (NEC) and Hitachi, Ltd. and the planned 100,000 chips (from July) for Mitsubishi F.lectric Corp. Furthermore, Oki is planning to start marketing them at less than ~�3,000 per chip, about ~�1,000 lower than the current average pYice, from October. On the strength of mass production and mass marketing at low prices, Oki hopes to take the leadership in the marketing race of the strategic electronics in the future. Against the backdrop of Oki's bold program is its recent achievement in elevating the production yield of 64K RAMs from the present 5 per cent or so to more than 10 per cent, according to Executive Managing Director Yoshio Masuda. Oki will actively export the chips to the U.S. The company already has set up a marketing subsidiary, Oki Semiconductor Inc., in Santa Clara, Calif. to facil.itate the marketing of 64K RAMs in the world's largest semiconductor mar- ket. [Text] [Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 May 81 P . C. ITOH SEMICONDUCTOR LINE--Trader C. Itoh & Co. has made a full entry into the promising semiconductor manufacturing equipment market. The nation's third largest trading company has become the sole agent of OptimetriX Corp. of Moun- tain View, Calif. and started importing fully automated direct wafer stepper project systems. C. Itoh hopes to market integrated semiconductor manufactur- ing systems in the future by gradually increasing the number of items it will handle. Acco rding to the importer, Optimetrix stepper pro~ection systems have a resolution capability never before achieved in pro~ ction masking. Lines and spaces to 1.5 microns can be obtained with the Optimetrix 8001, it said. Orders for several units already have been received, C. Itoh said. A system costs ~220 million. [Text] [Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 954, 12 May 81 p 7] . GREATER COMPUTER D~PORTS--Nippon Electric Co (NEC) hopes to raise the ratio of exports to its total computer sales from the present 6 per cent to 20.per cent in five years. In order to achieve the target, NEC will expand computer exports hy 60-80 per cent yearly :in the coming five years. In the latest 1980 business term ended March 31, the company sold about ~�15 billion worth computers abroad, accounting for only 6 per cent of its total computer sales. As far as exports are concerned, NEC lags far behind its rival computer builders--Fujitsu Limited and Hitachi, Ltd. Communications equipment and semiconductors occupy a far larger portion of NEC's exports than computers. As a first step, NEC plans to start shipments of a new series of office computers to the U.S., Australia and Southeast Asia in the second~half of the current 1981 business year. It hopes to deliver a total of 5,000 units in three years. Half of the 5,000-unit target will be sold in the U.S. NEC Information Systems Inc of Lexington, Mass, will market the new series of office computers with application programs specially designed for American users. In Southeast Asia, NEC Singapore Pte. Ltd. and NEC Malaysia Sdn. Bhd. will promote marketing. In Australia, NEC Information Sys- tems Australia Ltd started operation in April to facilitate computer sales there. The company also plans sales in Argentina. [Text] [Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May 81 p 9] 27 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02149: CIA-RDP82-44850R000400024415-9 FOR OI~FlCIAL USE ONt.Y SOVIET STEEL INSPECTION MISSION--The State Committee of U.S.~.R. Council of Min- isters for Science and Technology has notified the Japan Association for Trade with Soviet Union & Socialist Countries of Europe of its willingnzss to dispatch an investigatory mission to the Japanese steel industry. The Japan Iron & Steel Federation will shortly accept the Soviet request. The technical exchange be- tween the Soviet Union and Japan is based on the scientific and technical coop- eration agreement signed between the Soviet State Committee and the Japan Associarion. The Sov iet committee has so far dispatched missions to Japan's shipbuilding, chemical, industrial robot, automobile, and electronics industries. While the Soviet Union is the worl.d's largest steel producer, its steel output has been sluggish in recent years. But steel demand in the Soviet Union and its satellite countries is rising fast, as represented by the Yamburg natural gas pipeline construction which will use a large mount of large-diameter steel pipes. The committee's steel mission is expected to inspect Japanese steel plants with the principal aim of improving steelmaking facilities in the Soviet Union. [Text] ~Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 955, 19 May S1 p 6] OPTICAL LONG WAVELENGTH SYSTEM--An optical fiber communication system of 1.3 microns in light wavelength in the longwave range of such systems to promise a much greater communicable distance than any conventional equivalent system in the medium-wave range has been commercially developed by Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd of Osaka. The first model has been delivered to the Research Institute of Atmospherics of Nagoya University. The new system comprises op- tical fiber "cables" (lines) made of a quartz material. Such quartz-group materials have been well known as the best transmitters of light pulse signals in fiber optics communication. But product~ion of really good types of fiber lines, light emitters and receivers, had been technologically difficult until the company's solution of the technological problems involved. The company envisions that its new achievement will bring a decided expansion in the ap- plicability of the optical fiber communication systems so far developed in Japan because the lang-wavelength type of such a system attains a communicable distance 3.5 times the conventional medium-wavelength types. [Text] [Tokyo .TAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 28 Apr 81 p 15] CARBON FIBER CONCRETE--Sumitomo Metal Industries, Ltd. and Kajima Corp. jointly have developed what is said to be the world's first carbon fiber re- inforced concrete (CFRC) that is strong in bending. Compared wit:h ordinary concrete, the new concrete is about 30 times stronger and can be produced in any desired shape. It is made by mixing cement mortar with low modulus car- bon fiber (LMCF) up to 1 to 5 per cent. LMCF measures 10-25 microns in diameter and 3-30 millimeters long. Its elongation rate is 50-60-fold that of ordinary concrete, according to Sumitomo. Although the new concrete costs 5-10 times more in terms of unit price, less concrete is used, meaning that th.e cost is not so high. Kajima plans to commercialize CFRC around this fall. The company intends to use it as a new material in civil engineering fields. [Text] [Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19, No 952 ~8 Apr 81 p 16] - CSO: 4120 END 28 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400020015-9