This article examines the popularization process of rentan and mametan (cylindrical anthracite briquettes and anthracite briquette balls) in Japanese households. It points out that the scarcity of wood and charcoal and the supply of anthracite and molasses (used as an adhesive) from Asian countries encouraged the invention and implementation of such new types of fuels in the interwar period. They were widely accepted because they did not change conventional energy use habits. The study also shows that until the diffusion of imported fluid fossil fuels such as oil and gas in the 1960s, those kinds of briquettes had been supporting the energy consumption of family units as transitional energy. In other words, while Japan was experiencing a so-called “energy revolution” from coal to oil in the industrial sector, the use of diverse energy sources continued in the household sector. These two different paths of energy consumption played a role in mitigating overall energy constraints and concurrently sustaining a high economic growth.
Purchase
Buy instant access (PDF download and unlimited online access):
Institutional Login
Log in with Open Athens, Shibboleth, or your institutional credentials
Personal login
Log in with your brill.com account
Arai, Yoshio, ed. 1936. Zenkoku Rentan Kogyo Taikan [A General Survey of the Nationwide Briquette Industry]. Yokohama: Nihon Rentan Shimbunsha.
Bocho Mokutan Dogyo Kumiai. 1942. Showa Jyu Roku Nendo Gyomu Seiseki Hokokusho [1941 Financial Year Business Results Report]. Yamaguchi: Bocho Mokutan Dogyo Kumiai.
Bocho Mokutan Dogyo Kumiai. 1943. Hyogikai Kaisai Tsuchi no Koto [Announcing the Holding of a Trustees Meeting]. Yamaguchi: Bocho Mokutan Dogyo Kumiai.
Chiba, Terutane. 1942. Honguey Tanko [Hong Gai Coal Mine]. Tokyo: Boeki Shoreikai.
Comprehensive Energy Policy Planning Division of Minister’s Secretariat at Ministry of International Trade and Industry (Agency for Natural Resources and Energy after 1973), ed. 1966–1975. Sogo Enerugi Tokei [Comprehensive Energy Statistics]. Tokyo: Tsusho Sangyo Kenkyusha.
Furushima, Toshio. 1996. Daidokoro Yogu no Kindaishi [A Modern History of Kitchen Utensils]. Tokyo: Yuhikaku Publishing.
Hofu Nenryo Kouri Shogyo Kumiai. 1943. Hofu Nenryo Kouri Shogyo Kumiai Rinji Sokaigian [Extraordinary General Meeting Agenda of Hofu Fuel Retailer Association]. Hofu: Hofu Nenryo Kouri Shogyo Kumiai.
Hofu Sekitan Rentansho Kumiai. 1940. Shushi Keisansho [Income and Expenditure Accounts]. Hofu: Hofu Sekitan Rentansho Kumiai.
Ichikawa, Toranosuke, ed. 1926. Tokyo Shintan Dogyo Kumiai Enkaku [A History of the Tokyo Charcoal and Firewood Merchants’ Association]. Tokyo: Toranosuke Ichikawa.
Imura, Masahisa, and Atsuyuki Okada, eds. 1992. 40 Shunen Kinen: Nenryogyokai no Hensen [40th Anniversary Memorial: Changes of the Fuel Trading Industry]. Tokyo: Tokyo Nenryo Ton’ya Kyokai.
Ishida Shiro Shoten. 1941. Kengaihin Inyu Jisseki Chosho [Report on Goods Brought in from Outside the Prefecture]. Hofu: Ishida Shiro Shoten.
Kabushikigaisha Mitsuuroko Shashi Hensan Bunkakai, ed. 1976. Mitsuuroko Gojyu Nenshi [50-year History of Mitsuuroko]. Tokyo: Kabushikigaisha Mitsuuroko.
Kanda, Sayako. 2015. “Kingendai Indo no Enerugii [Energy in Modern and Contemporary India].” In Gendai Indo 1: Tayoka Shakai no Chosen [Contemporary India Series 1: Challenges of Diversity-driven Society], edited by Akio Tanabe, Kaoru Sugihara, and Kohei Wakimura, 85–109. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.
Kanda, Sayako. 2019. “The Birth of an ‘Energy Diverse Society’ in Nineteenth-Century India.” Paper presented at the fourth conference of the Asian Association of World Histories, January 5–6, Osaka, Japan.
Kasuga, Yutaka. 2010. Teikoku Nihon to Zaibatsu Shosha: Kyoko – Sensoka no Mitsui Bussan [Imperial Japan and Zaibatsu Trading Companies: Mitsui & Co. in Times of Panic and War]. Nagoya: University of Nagoya Press.
Kawasumi, Masashi. 1936. “Mametan Jigyo no Kaiko [A Review of the Briquette Ball Business].” Nenryo Kyokaishi [Journal of Fuel Society of Japan] 15 (7): 871–884.
Kobori, Satoru. 2010. Nihon no Enerugii Kakumei: Shigen Shoukoku no Kingendai [The Energy Revolution in Japan: A Modern and Contemporary History of the Resource-Scarcity Country]. Nagoya: University of Nagoya Press.
LP Gasu Gyokai 10 Nenshi Kanko Iinkai, ed. 1963a. LP Gasu Gyokai 10 Nenshi: Jo [10-year History of the LP Gas Industry: Part 1]. Tokyo: Sekiyu Kagaku Shimbun Sha.
LP Gasu Gyokai 10 Nenshi Kanko Iinkai, ed. 1963b. LP Gasu Gyokai 10 Nenshi: Ge [10-year History of the LP Gas Industry: Part 2]. Tokyo: Sekiyu Kagaku Shimbun Sha.
Makino, Fumio. 1996. Manekareta Purometeusu: Kindai nihon no gijutsu hatten [The Invited Prometheus: Technological Development in Modern Japan]. Tokyo: Fukosha.
Mitsuuroko Rokujyu Nenshi Shuppan Bunkakai, ed. 1985. Ashita wo Hiraku: Mitsuuroko 60 Nenshi [Revealing the Future: 60-year History of Mitsuuroko]. Tokyo: Kabushikigaisha Mitsuuroko.
Mitsuwa Sangyo Kabushikigaisha, ed. 1991. Mitsuwa Sangyo Gojyu Shunen Kinenshi: Obinata Takeshige, Mitsuwa Sangyo to Tomo ni [Mitsuwa Sangyo 50th anniversary commemorative publication: Takeshige Obinata with Mitsuwa Sangyo]. Tokyo: Mitsuwa Sangyo Kabushikigaisha.
Nagahiro, Toshitaka. 2009. Senkanki Nihon Sekitan Kogyo no Saihen to Sangyo Soshiki: Karuteru no Rekishi Bunseki [Reorganization of Japan’s Coal Mining Industry and Its Industrial Organization in the Interwar Period: Historical Analysis of Cartels]. Tokyo: Nihon Keizai Hyoronsha.
Nakamura, Takafusa, ed. 1993. Kakeibo kara Mita Kindai Nihon Seikatsushi [A History of Everyday Life in Modern Japan: From Domestic Accounts]. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.
Nenryo Kyokai, ed. 1936. Nenryo Nenkan [Fuel Yearbook] 1936–37. Kawaguchi: Nenryo Kyokai.
Nihon Gasu Kyokai, ed. 1997. Nihon Toshi Gasu Sangyoshi [A History of the Japanese City Gas Industry]. Tokyo: The Japan Gas Association.
Nihon Rentan Kabushikigaisha. 1927. Dai Roku Jyu Kai Eigyo Hokokusho [60th Business Report]. Tokyo: Nihon Rentan Kabushikigaisha.
Nihon Sekitan Kabushikigaisha Kikakubu, ed. 1941. Chosen Sekitan Kogyo Jijo Kenkyu [A Study of the Circumstances of the Korean Coal Industry]. N.p.: Nihon Sekitan Kabushikigaisha.
Nihon Sekitan Kyokai. 1950. Sekitan Tokei Sokan 1950 [Coal Statistics 1950]. Tokyo: Nihon Sekitan Kyokai.
Norinsho Sanrinkyoku, ed. 1927. Daiyou Mokutan no Seisan Jokyo [Production Situation of Charcoal Production]. Tokyo: Norinsho Sanrinkyoku.
Sanrin Muentan Kabushikigaisha. 1940. Dai Ni Jyu Kyu Kai Eigyo Hokokusho [29th Business Report]. Tokyo: Sanrin Muentan Kabushikigaisha.
Sekitan Seisakushi Hensan Iinkai, ed. Sekitan Seisakushi Shiryohen [A History of Coal Policy: A Book of Materials]. Tokyo: Japan Coal Energy Center.
Shashi Hensan Iinkai, ed. 1990. Korona Gojyu Nenshi: Seijitsu to Doryoku [Corona 50-year History: Sincerity and Hard Work]. Sanjo: Uchida Seisakusho.
Shigen Chosakai, ed. 1949. Katei Nenryo Shohi Jittai Chosa Hokoku: Daiichi Ho [Survey Report on Household Fuel Consumption Situation: Report Number 1]. Tokyo: Shigen Chosakai.
Shimanishi, Tomoki. 2011. Nihon Sekitan Sangyo no Sengoshi: Shijo Kozo Henka to Kigyo Kodo [The Coal Industry in Japan, 1937–1973]. Tokyo: Keio University Press.
Shimanishi, Tomoki. 2017. “Betonamu Sekitan Sangyo no Hatten to Nihon: Sekitan Seisan Gijutu Iten Jigyo no Rekishiteki Haikei” [The Coal Industry in Vietnam from the Late 19th Century to the 20th Century]. Keizai Ronshu [The Economic Review of Toyo University] 43 (1): 73–93.
Shinagawa Nenryo Kabushikigaisha, ed. 1987. Shinagawa Nenryo 60 Nenshi [A 60-year History of Shinagawa Nenryo]. Tokyo: Shinagawa Nenryo Kabushikigaisha.
Statistics Bureau of Prime Minister’s Office, ed. 1955–1975. Kakei Chosa Nenpo [Annual report on the family income and expenditure survey]. Tokyo: Nihon Tokei Kyokai.
Statistics Bureau of Prime Minister’s Office, ed. 1956–1959. Kouri Bukka Tokei Chosa Kekka Hokoku [Report on the Retail Price Survey]. Tokyo: Statistics Bureau of Prime Minister’s Office.
Statistics Bureau of Prime Minister’s Office, ed. 1959–1975. Kouri Bukka Tokei Chosa Nenpo [Annual Report on the Retail Price Survey]. Tokyo: Nihon Tokei Kyokai.
Sugihara, Kaoru. 2012. “Kaseki Shigen Sekai Keizai no Koryu to Baiomasu Shakai no Saihen” [The Rise of the “Fossil-Fuel-Based World Economy” and the Reorganization of Biomass Societies]. In Rekishi no Naka no Nettai Seizon-Ken: Ontai Paradaimu wo Koete [The Tropical Humanosphere in Global History: Beyond the Temperate-Zone Perspective], edited by Kaoru Sugihara, Kohei Wakimura, Koichi Fujita, and Akio Tanabe, 149–184. Kyoto: Kyoto University Press.
Suzuki, Jun. 1999. Shingijutsu no Shakaishi [A Sociography of New Technologies]. Tokyo: Chuokoron-Shinsha.
Taiwan Nichi Nichi Shinpo [Taiwan Daily Newspaper]. 1937. January 27, 28.
Tsujimoto, Ken’nosuke. 1932. “Toshi ni Okeru Baien Mondai” [Problems of Smoke and Soot in Urban Areas]. Nenryo Kyokaishi [Journal of Fuel Society of Japan] 11 (10): 1478–1488.
Yamasa Sogyo Kabushikigaisha, ed. 1977. Hono’o to Tomo ni 30 Nen: Yamasa Sogyo Shashi [30 Years with the Flame: Corporate History of Yamasa Sogyo]. Nagoya: Yamasa Sogyo Kabushikigaisha.
Yuyama, Eiko. 2013. “Futsuryo Indoshina ni okeru Nihonsho no Katsudo: 1910 Nendai kara 1940 Nendai hajime no Mitsui Bussan to Mitsubishi Shoji no Jininhaichi kara kousatsu” [Japanese Merchants’ Activities in French Indochina: Discussion from the Viewpoint of Deployment of Mitsui & Co. and Mitsubishi Corp. from the 1910s to the beginning of the 1940s]. Keizaigaku Kenkyu [The Economic Studies of Hokkaido University] 62 (3): 283–297.
Zenkoku Nenryo Kaikan, ed. 1957–1976. Mokutan Maki Sonota Katei Nenryo Tokei Shiryo [Statistical Material on Firewood, Charcoal, and Other Household Fuels]. Tokyo: Zenkoku Nenryo Kaikan.
Zenkoku Nenryo Kaikan Nihon Mokutanshi Hensan Iinkai, ed. 1960. Nihon Mokutanshi [Japan’s Charcoal History]. Tokyo: Zenkoku Nenryo Kaikan.
Zenkoku Sekiyugyo Kyodo Kumiai Rengokai and Zenkoku Sekiyu Syogo Kumiai Rengokai, ed. 1974. Zensekiren 20 Nenshi: Zensekikyo Soritsu 20 Syunen, Zensekisho Soritsu 10 Syunen [20-year History of National Federation of Oil Trader Cooperative Association: 20th Anniversary of the Founding of National Federation of Oil Trader Cooperative Association and 10th Anniversary of the Founding of the National Federation of Oil Merchants Association]. Tokyo: Zenkoku Sekiyugyo Kyodo Kumiai Rengokai and Zenkoku Sekiyu Syogo Kumiai Rengokai.
All Time | Past 365 days | Past 30 Days | |
---|---|---|---|
Abstract Views | 2976 | 2595 | 711 |
Full Text Views | 35 | 14 | 0 |
PDF Views & Downloads | 28 | 5 | 0 |
This article examines the popularization process of rentan and mametan (cylindrical anthracite briquettes and anthracite briquette balls) in Japanese households. It points out that the scarcity of wood and charcoal and the supply of anthracite and molasses (used as an adhesive) from Asian countries encouraged the invention and implementation of such new types of fuels in the interwar period. They were widely accepted because they did not change conventional energy use habits. The study also shows that until the diffusion of imported fluid fossil fuels such as oil and gas in the 1960s, those kinds of briquettes had been supporting the energy consumption of family units as transitional energy. In other words, while Japan was experiencing a so-called “energy revolution” from coal to oil in the industrial sector, the use of diverse energy sources continued in the household sector. These two different paths of energy consumption played a role in mitigating overall energy constraints and concurrently sustaining a high economic growth.
All Time | Past 365 days | Past 30 Days | |
---|---|---|---|
Abstract Views | 2976 | 2595 | 711 |
Full Text Views | 35 | 14 | 0 |
PDF Views & Downloads | 28 | 5 | 0 |