Kyocera Grows Green Curtains to Save Energy

05/31/2012
SustainableBusiness.com News

In an innovative move to save energy, Japan-based Kyocera is planting green curtains on all its buildings.

In the wake of the nuclear shutdown, Japan has set energy reduction targets, and this is one way Kyocera is meeting them.

Curtains of foliage grace the walls of manufacturing and office buildings and grow on trellises over windows, providing shade from direct sunlight and heat radiation. They reduce the temperature inside buildings, reducing the need for air-conditioning systems in the hot summer months.

They also produce food! Green Curtains can be grown using vegetable plants such as goya or kidney beans, which are now joyfully harvested by employees and served in their cafeterias.  

Green Curtains at KYOCERA Nagano Okaya Plant  

Kyocera, which is a major solar panel manufacturer, has 2 megawatts installed at 18 company facilities in Japan.

Some of the other simple measures it's taken to conserve energy, which can apply to any business, include:

Reduce Air Conditioning Use:

Improved Lighting and Other Energy Reducers:

Kyocera's Green Curtain website has photos and illustrations showing how you can grow them at home or at the office:

Website: http://global.kyocera.com/ecology/greencurtains/index.html