JPRS ID: 9973 JAPAN REPORT

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R040400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/99.73 9 September 1981 - Ja an Re ort p p CFOUO 53/81) Fg~$ FOR~IGN BROADCAST INFORM~4TION SERVIGE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R004400054023-7 NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily 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. Aeadlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Proc:essing indicators such as [Text] or [ExcerptJ 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 rendere3 phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- ' tion mark a~id 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 th~ source. Times within items are as given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. � COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEP4INATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL US:~ OiVLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS z/99~3 9 September 1981 - JAPAN REPORT (FOUO 53/81) CONTENTS ~ SCIENCE AND TECffi~1~LOGY Office Automation Age Foreca~t (DIAMOND'3 T.NDUSTRIA, No 8, 19$1) 1 USSIt 5eeke Lower Intereat Rate for Purchasing Steel ~ (JAPAN ECONO~MIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81)..0 13 _ Japan-U.S.-Sweden Coalition Set for Robot Production, Sales (JAPAN ECON(~'MIC 30URNAL, 18 Aug 81) 14 ~ Toshiba Machine Loses Soviet Deals (JAPAN ECONO~iIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81) 15 Caterpillar Mitaubishi Sells 400 Bulldozers to USSR ~ ' (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81) 16 Sumitomo Metal Wfll Provide U.S. Steel With Pipe Technology (JAPAN ECONOMIC JQURNAL, 18 Aug 81) 17 Research on Laser Re,~istant Optical Film (JAPADI ECONOMI:C JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81)........ 18 ' Satellite for Weather Use Is Launched (JAPAN EC~NOMIC JOIIRNAL, 18 Aug $1) 19 Toray Makes Zirconia Ceramic H~ving High Bending Str~ngth (JAPt~PT ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81) 20 Asahi Glass Plans Using Ion Exchange Membrane Technology - (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81) 21 Circuit Lines of 0.5 Micron Width Etched on Wafer by New Technology (JAPAN ECONOP~SIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81).e 22 - a - [III - ASIA - 111 FOUO] CAD ACCf/''i ~*'`nC ANY V APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Douglas-Fokker Team Offers Flexible Terms for Plaae Plan (JAPAN ECONUMIC JOURNAL, 18 Aug 81) 23 Green Cross Acquires Interest in Collaborative Research Inc. (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNA?., 18 Au$ 81)......,. 24 - Government Begins Emphasis on Developing Biotechaology for ?~s~{^o ~ (JAPAN ECONOMIC JO~JRNAL, 18 Aug 81) 25 Twelve Different Colors Identified by Unique Sensor . (JAPAN ECONdMIC JOURNAL, 11 Aug ~1)........... 27 Nippon Oil Develops Fermentatian Method for Mgking Fuel Alcohol , (JAPAN ECONOMYC JOURI~IAL, 11 Aug 81) 28~ Structural Change of Petrochemical Industry Suggested (Editorial; JAPAN ECONOISIC JOURNAL, 11 Aug 81) 29 Production Revolution Underway ia Factories of Small.er Enterprisr~~s (Ratsuhiko Hirano; JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 11 Aug 81)........:.. 31 Cable, Wire Makers Are Investing Heavily in Opt~cal Fiber Equipment . - (JAPAN LCONO~iIC JOIIRNAL, 11 Aug 81) 33 ~ Shipbuildere Moning Toward 'Revitalization' (JAPAN ECONO~iI~ JaITRNAL, 11 Aug 81) 34 Hitachi, GE Reach Overall Accord on Robot Production, Sales (JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 11 Aug 81) 35 Miti Will Ease Staad c~a Exports to Yamburg Pro~ect � (JAPAN ECON~IIC JOURNAL, 11 Aug 81) 36 -~b- POR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/09: CIA-RDP82-00854R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AIdD TECHNOLOGY OFFICE AUTOMATION AGE FORECAST Tokyo D?AMOND'S INDUSTRIA in English Vol 11, No 8, 1981 pp 8-18 LArticle: "The Coming Office Autamation Age'!/ 1Text% _ . New Fra The 56th International Business Show fiom fast to riioderate growth. Until was held at the Intemational Trading recently the Japanese business Center in Harumi, Tokyo, from May community had continued prosperity 13 to 16, 1981. A total of 170 busi- through the ratio~alization and auto- ness fums, up 19 over the previous mation of produ~tion ~ines. The year, exhibited more than 15,000 items community is now making a bi~_stride of products. This yeaz, the number of forward to office automation. During pavilions was raised from four to the past few years the word "office five. Under the theme "office automa- automation" has been increasingly tion that creates management power popu~ar. The idea of office automation - for the 1980s," this year's business fust emrged in the United States from show feat~~red the display and demon- , the contention that productivity in stration of business machines and offices was far behind that of produc- information processing machines of tion lines. And soon it was introduced _ both domestic and foreign manufa~c� to Japan. turers. The show clearly indicated At business shows, emphasis on rapidly growing interest in office exhibits has been shiftIng gradually au.omation in recent years by Japa� from computers, copiers, facsimiles and nese businesses. other individual products to systems Erom May 27 to 30, the "Micro- combining these business machines. computer Show '81" was held at Especially at this year's show, exhibits the Tokye Distribution Center in concerning the future of office auto- Heiwajima, Tokyo. The number of mation attracted public attention. visitors to this show was no less than Emphasis has alse been shifting from _ that to tke Business Show. data processing with big computers by Although rapid bnsiness growth professionals .to the rationalization of _ contniues in some sectors, the Japa- clerical worl~ at ordinary offices. At nese Pconomy has been placed in , the Microcomputer Show, too, visitors severe conditions forcing a shift were showing more inte*sst in peisonal 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFF'ICIAL USE ONLY computers (small computers for Nagoya in 1uly, 1980, and a similar personal e.se) for office work and shaw room in Tokyo in Eebruary, hobby than microcomputers to be in- 1981. Mitsubishi Electric opened corporated into apparatus. "Mitsubishi Electric Office Automa- ~ The biggest obs~acle in Office auto- tion P1aza" in Tokyo at the end of mation in Japan is the complicated June. recording system using the Japanese Nippon Electric Co. (NEC), a lead� language. Booking by Japanese re- ing communications equipment manu- quires a far more complicated system factunr, is striving for the spread of - than that for European languages - office automation under the name of using less than 40 alphabetical letteYS, "C & C(computer & communication) arabic figures and several marks. In Office System." In June, 1980, the the conventional system in which t~ company cteated~ the "Office Systems use both the alphabet and the Japa- pevelopinent Division" in its head nese "katakana," work reli~s on office. Then it installed a total of specially-trained operators. Develop- 500 personal computers and 50 ward ment of a machine that would enable proassors in the head office and its the use of the Japanese language factories located in the Tokyo area. system, including "hirakana" and The company also established a wholly Chinese characters, has been the key owned subudiary in Abiko neaz to full�scale office automation in 'Tokyo to ~manufacturo business Japan. The Japanssedanguage-using machines. The plant now under machine was In the spotlight in this constnution ls expected to go into year's Business Show. It marked the operation in 1982. It will have a model beginning of an offia automation era room for office automation Yo operate in Japan. the company's actual clerical work On August 21, 1980, Hitachi, Ltd. effectively. An office automation established the "Promotion Depart� boom is coming in Japan. ment Office Automation Systems" in ~p~ ~o~ ~.he structure of its head office. In November, 1980, Toshiba created the According to statistics by the Office Automation Division that com� Ministry of Intemational Trade and prises four departments, whlle Mitsu� Ind4stry (MITI), Japan's, business bishi Electric inaugurated an "Office ma:;hine output in 1980 totaled ; Automation Project." These firms are ~f726,111 millIon, up 22.6% ovef Japan's leading general electric and 1979. Data of main items are as electronic equipment manufacturers follovua: � making computers, word processors, Copiers .......~f336,751 million facsimiles and other busi.ness ma� Des1c-Top Calculators chines. The production and mazket� ~ , , , , , . , . . , .~F202,279 million ing of these products were under the Cash Registers ...~iF86,882 million control of diffennt depaztrnents or Typewxiters .....~51,816 million divisions in charge of them. But tl~e p~~~, ,,,..,..3F48,383 million manufacturers carried ont the organi- TOTAL .....~726,111 million zational changes in order to make ~�Othecs" in the table include micro- systems combining the individual ~`~m equipment, office�use printers, machines that will meet the needs of accounting machines, time stamps and respective clients. time recorders. Tosiuba opened the "Toshiba ppazt from the above�listed data, Office Automation Show Room" in MITI provides statistics on facsimiles, 2 , . _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONI~Y - computers and related equipment of the first oil crisis - was~8.6%over under the category of "electric equip- 1972, which is in sharp contrast with ment." The production of facsimile those for the period from 1974 to = in 1980 was valued at ~If81,018 mil- 1979. They were 10.0%, 0.1%, 31.9%, lion, a 30.9% increase over 1979, ~,S%, 10.6% and 43% in annual order. - and that of computers and related Business machines heavily depend on , equipment was ~1,295,386 million, export business. In general, growth up 15.2%. Demand for business ma- ~tes are high, although there are big chine has been strong. Especially in variations. 1980, all products showed high pro- ~ May, the Business Machine duction increases thanks to a rising Makers Association published a"busi- tide of office automation and brisk ness machine vision," in which it pro- exports. The production of tYpe� jected producti~n and exports in 1985 writers increased 33.9% in value, and 1990. According to this, pmduc- desk�top catculators 31.2%, cash regis- tion would increase after 1980 at an ters 30.2% an3 copien 24.7%. annual rate of 6.3% to reach ~f986,536 The Japan Business Machine Makers ~llion in 1985. After the year, the Association in March published the growth rate would be down at 6.2%, estimates for the 1980 production of and the production will total six major business machines and a ~32g,650 million in 1990. The ratio forecast for 1981 production. The six _ products are electronic desk-top calcu� of exports to total output is set at lators, copiers, offset printers, micro- 70.5% for 1985 and 67.1% for 1990. film equipment, western�letter type� However, these sre the projections - writers and electronic cash registers. for the products included in MITI According to the estimate, 1980 pro� statistics as business machines. Besides duction totaled ~F718,751 million. Of these, there are office automation this, domestic demand was ~f212,7?7 related products, such as word proces- million, up 10.1~/0 over 1979. Exports sors, electr~nic translators, offce com- - totaled ~F506,024 million, up 27.4%. puters, personal computers, business- The I981 forecast sets domestic use facsimiles and _business-use demand at ~f222,600 million, up 4.6% materials. If all these are included, over 1980, and exports at ~f571,680 production in 1985 and 1990 million, up 13.0�l0. The total 1981 will be ~F3,676,500 million and output would be aF794,280 million, ~f5,389,600 million, respectively. The up 10.5~10. average annual growth rxtes are set At the beginning of 1980, the at 1?.6% and 8.0%. As office automa- association estimated 1980 growth at tion spreads further, production will 6.8% for domestic demand and 7.7~Io increase at higher rates. That, of for exports. But the actual business course, will include various newly- results far exceeded these figures. developed machines. - The growth rates for 1981 are kept low for worldwide business stagnation. However, the actual growth rate of each category of products will vary � widely with its market conditions and the development of new products. According to MITI's machinery statis- tics, the growth rate of business ma� chine production in 1973 - the year 3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Copiers units in 1970, but that in 1979 their ratio rose ta 79;'0 of the world's output of 889,000 units. Thus Japan Intensifying Competition m PPC has become the principal supply center Japan's copier production surpassed of copiers for the world market. 1 million units in 1980. Demand has ~e performance of small�sized been strong centering on popuiar .Tapanese PPCs is advan~ing every year, model PPCs (plain paper copiers). and they are becom'sng increasingly According to MITI statistics, copier convenient with such new functions output in 1980 totaled 1,123,720 as cut-sized copying and sorter. They units (a 24.7% increase over 1979), can now take different qualities of valued at ~f336,751 million, up 29.9%. paper. In July, 1981, Sharp marketed - Business growth is obvious whei: com- what it claimed the world's srnallest pared with the growth rates of 1979 - and lightest PPC, "Copy Ace SF�750." 13.2�Io in volume and 11.8% in value. 'I'he machine, weighing 32 kg, can P ~d growth is more conspicuous in Copy papers up to B4 size (364 mm x higher grade products. Copier exports 257 mm) and make a maximum 99 copies in a row. With microcomputer - in 1980 totaled ~F222,~53 million, up � 31.2% over 19~9. The ratio of exports con~rol, the machine can also inter- to producdon was 66.2%. Brisk ~P~ the continuous copying to take exports are sustaining high levels of other copies. It is also equipped with a production, although the export ratio function of automatic diagnosis of is not so high among business ma- operations. ~ In the market of high-grade models, chines. Xerox stfll has a dominant position. _ In the breakdown of 1980 produc- But in May, 1981, Ricoh marketed a tion, indirect static type copiers - mainly PPCs - rose by 37.8% to high�grade model, "ST 7500," which 946~66 units,_ d'uect static type ~s capable of making 60 copies a copiers - centering on electrofax minute and suitable for a monthly types - were down 22.3% at 87,319 opeaation ranging from 20,000 to units, and other models, including 120,000 copies. Thus Japanese diazo type copiers, down 11.8% at products are steadily penetrating into 90,035 units. As a result of rises in the high�grade model market. - performance and falls in price, PPCs The plain pa~er copier is indupen- are replacing electrofax type copiers, sable in the office automation era. while curbing growth of diazo type Models that can be linked with com- products whose copy costs are low. puters and facsimiles are now being Until only 10 years ago, Xerox of developed. At present, Ricoh is the U.S. had been controlling the Japan's top copier maker. Fuji Xerox world's PPC market. But the situation 8nd Canon aze competing to take changed after Japan began manufac� che second position, followed by turing PPCs. Japanese makers con- Konishiroku Photo Industry and centrated th~ir efforts on the develop- Sharp. At the end of last year, Matsu- ment of small�sized models. Soon shita Electric Industrial, Olympus _ Japanese products swept the world Optical and Kyoto Ceramic entered market for their reasonable prices and p~oduction of copiers. Their primary high perfom:;ance. A survey by the P~~Po~ appears to be development of Japan Business Machine Makers models suitable for office automation Association shows that Japanese prod- systems. Naturally, their entry into ucts accounted for only 7% of the the field is intensifying competition world's PPC production of 167,000 among makers. 4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 ~ FOR O~FFICIAL USE ONLY h dhan ng of a facsimile is far easier Facsimiles than tha? of a telerype, too. The high- speed facsimile can also help cut ex- Continuing Growth penses for communications. Price cuts brought about by technical advances The facsimile market has achieved obviously contributed to the spread big growth during the past several of the machine. ' years. &hind the rapid spread of Matsushisa Graphic Communication facsimiles are changes in the market Systems is the top facsimile maker in situation. The tslephone line was 1apan, follow~esi by Ricoh, NEC and opened for general facsimile use in Toshiba. Hitachi, Sanyo Electric and Japan in .1972. U:~til then, newspaper Canon aro also tuaning out the prod- and few other companies werc using uct. These and other makers that facsimiles through exclusively con- exceed 20 in number are vying fietcely tracted lines. Then, intemational in technology and p~ice. standards for the equipment were Manufacturers are now developing established to enable communications two rypes of products~ One is a com- between differens models. Following pact sized, low�priced standard model G�I standards for low-speed models for smaller businesses. The other is a and G�II standards for medium-speed high-grade model that would b~e ~ models, G-III standards for high�speed incorporated into office automati~n models were established in 1979,,com- systems. In May, 19~1, Toshib~ pleting the rystem for general facsimile marketed COPIX 6000, a desk-rtop, service, compact, multi�functional f~csimile MITI's statistics indicate spectacu- that meets dual modes - G-II .and lar facsimile production growth since G�III. In June, Matsushita Graphic 1977. The annual production grovi+th Communication ~ystems put en sale in volume marked 50.7% in 1977, UF-520 IV, a high resolutio~ business 61.8% in 1978, 48.3% in 1979 and facsimile which has 16 dats in one 43.2% in 198Q. Ttse 1980 output m~~~ter, compared with t1u ordi- totaled 100,375 units. In teans of nary 8 dots and the i2 dots of ,the value, the similar growth rate register� }ughest resoluti~n mc~del i~r ~usiness ed 55.7% in 1977, 43.7% in 1978, ~e new model enabled ~e re- 45.2% in 1979 and 3Q.9% in 1980. transmission af transmittied data, The 1980 production was ~f81,018 which had been d~f~cult in the past. million. The growth rates in value are With an appliaation of the digital lower than the rates in quantity p~ciple, the facsimile can now be inctease, because the unit prices are used as an input or a.~i output terminal declining. of a computer, and is entering an eta Facsimile exports in 1980 nearly of rapid expansion as the office auto- doubled to ~15,101 million. But mation cor~~ept spreads. ' exports accounted for only 18.6% of On the other hand, the Nippon the total output in value. The heary T~legraph & Telephone Public Corp., dependence on domestic demand is a ~ a joint project witt~ six electric feature different from other main lines appliance makers, has develo~ed a of office equipment. Demand for ~all facsimile, "Mini Fax" (the trans- ~ facsimiles that can transmit sentences mittable size: 210 mm x 14~ mm), in Japanese, including many Chinese a~d is makir~g preparations to estab- characters, and charts is far stronger lish a facsimile transmission ~etwork - than thai for teletypes for English for subscribers and eventually open and other European ?anguages. The it to ordinary households. 5 FOR QFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Office Computers Users Include Large Enterprise.s According to its survey of computers A computer has gone out of the of this category, their shipments computer room to take its place in from makers during fiscal 1979 totaled ordinary offices. Models actually used 20,828 units (up 64.4% over fiscal there are "office computers." Original- 1978), valued at ~f146,267 million (up ly the computer needs to be housed 69.8%). Although the figures for in ar. air-conditioned, clean special fiscal 1980 are not yet available, the room for satisfactory performance azed growth rates are estimated at about is operated by specialists. The office 30�l0. The idea of office a~tomation computer, on the other hand, is began to be widely tallced about in a s.mall model which is easy to handle 1979. Since then shipments of office _ and can be operated in the ordinary computers have been continuously room by any businessman or office increasing. clerk as long as he or she has knowl- ; Among the 26 manufacture~s and edge of how to use it. And such ir~~porters ptaced under the survey, products have been developed and Mitsubishi Electric, Nippon Electric begun to be used widely in offices. and Toshiba form the top group of In Japan, the word `'office com� manufacturers, followed by Ricoh, puter" was used by Mitsubishi Electric Casio Computer, Fujitsu, Sharp and Corp., when it marketed a small Uchida. In a recent trend, an incr~as- computer, "MELCOM 80" in January, ing number of small businesses are 1968. Soon other makers began buying low-priced models as their maki~-~g small computers for office performances are improving rapidly. use, and the word "office computer" In addition, big businesses an joining was established. The o~tice computer buyers of office computers as the idea has various limitations in performance, of office automation is spreadin~. but its price is far lower than that of Especially conspicuous is that office the ordinary computer. The office compuiers are being used as terminals computer first gained popularity of a big computer to divide the work among small- and medium-sized busi� load of the big computer. In February, nesses. But the bigger type of the 1981, Mitsubishi Electric marketed office computer now hag various func- "MELCOM 80 Model 48," which has tions typical of ordinary small com- a maximum main memory capacity = puters, and its price has been reduced of 4 mega-bytes and can connect as thanks to technological a~vancement. many as 32 terminal devices. Therefore, it is difficult to distin- Furthermore, the emergence of guish an office compqter from an models with a Chinese character ordinary computer in both structure (kanji) processing function has greatly and performance. The Japan Electron- contributed to the spread of office ic Industry Development Association computers. Demand for such models has its definition for office computers was especially strong from smaller - they aze small or very small com� businesses. The recent advancement of nuters to be used in ordinary offices semiconductor technology has helped and their prices for standard system raise the funcdons of printet and dis� ~ range fiom ~f3 million to ~f30 million. play, lower. memory costs and thus 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FO;t OFEICIAL USE ONLY ~ introduce the n~r processmg t thc lowtst price of an office computer, function to tha office computer. Its main unit is priced at as low as About 60% of office computers now ~F200,000. It t3rst began to be used for in production are of the kanji system. games, and some expensive modely In January, 1980, Hitachi, Ltd. were being used for civil engineering , developed a new Kanji Processing and other technological purposes. Extended Information System (K~IS) Eiowever,- computers of that type which can be used both in large com- began spreading rapidly as makers puters and small ones, and employed it developed general-puipose program in the office computer L-330 of packages and their costs became *ela- HITAC L Series. The syster*~. was also ; tively low. The program package made adopted by L-320 that was marketed ~ computer operations easy for maldng . in ~ept$mber last year. various types of slips, the managemerat Makers have developed a number of of customer lists, the calculation flf application programs for accounting wages, sales control, stock cor~trol and offices, hospitals, gas stadons and other clerical works. It is, of co~rse, various other business offices to possible to make programs for sp~cifc promote sales of office computers to needs by using BASI~ rsnd othes smaller businesses. The spreading of relatively easy computer l~a~gua'ges. office computers will continue in the NEC and Sharp are tMr Big Tuvo of future. personal computer makers. They are f~llowed by Hitachi, Sord ~nmp~ter - System and Oki Eiectric 3aidustry. There are more than 20 makars. But Personal Computers che top three hold rnore tl~an 8~Q3% of the market. Ma~ny make�s are expand- ing production facilities in ocder to fill ~P~ SP~ ~S~s the rapidly expandin~ market. New- comers are also jr~ir:ing the buslness. Personal computers for business use j'~1d p~rto~anc;~ oF [lie peESOnaI began to be employed by many offices computer is speedily improving thanks around the mi~-1980, and many to the advances in LSI (large scale ~ makers have entered this field of integration circuit). Competition with business, which is booming today. office computers of the lowest rank Both personal computers and office will intensify in the future. The top computers are applied products of maker, NEC, is selling a business nnicrocomputers, and there are no persr.;,a computer NEC system 20/25, clear distinctions between them. The w;~ich is priced at slightly lower than office computet merely has a str~nger ~3 million. It is equipped with a image of a machine to be installe~ 4n communication device to receive data an office, wh~1e the personal computer from computers or data terminals at has the image of an instrument to be distances away. Eight dic'~erent used by an indiWidual. Therefore, the melodies indicate the conditions of the price of a personal computer is lower system. In April, 1981, Sharp market- than that of an office compute*. Small ed the "Clean Computer MZ�80B," - computers whose unit price is below which is equipped with a high-speed ~F; million are classified as personal microprocessor of 4 MHz. It also has computers. Actually, their standard a unique functior, t~ a~~:e programs prices range from ~800,000 to in the standard ~assette tape for audio ~F1,300,000, which are less than half u~, 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY In April, 1981, Tokyo Electric Co. necessary words and thus complete concluded a business tie-up aaange- the sentences. [t alsa has aditing func- ment with Tandy Corp., the top tions, such as rearrangement of personal computer maker in the U.S. sentences or making corrections by Under the accord, Tokyo Electric will using the display. Therefore, the word market Tandy products in 3apan and processor is often being used' for a begin assembling main units in Japan. Japanese language typewriter. In the Earlier, American products were future, the role of a word processor in imported for hobby use. But now, office automation will be expanded Japanese-made personal computers for greatly by connecting it with other business use are spreading, and U.S. word processors, computers or fac- makers are joining hands with Japa- similes. nese firms to expand their market in A survey by the Nihon Office Japan. Management Association shows that as Altttough there xre no govemment of the end of November, 1980, 14.3% statistics on office computers and of the 529 firms, including those listed personal computers, it is no doubt that on tl-e Tokyo Stock Exchange and - their markcts are expanding rapidly. computer centers, were using Japanese At the same time, sales competition language ~~vord processors and 7.7% - is becoming increasingly fierce, as of them had plans to introduce the more makecs join the market. machines. In the survey the ratio of _ those who had at least some knowl- - i edge of a word processor was 85.4%. - Word Processors Although the word processnr was still _ quite new on the market at that time, the survey indicated that business Stroag Demand firms had strong interest in that In the United States and Europe, particular product. The descriptive system of the the word processor opened the way Japanese language is far more campli- for office automatioa. In Japan, how� cated than :hose of English and other ever, the development of word pro- European languages. The number of cessors wds delayed due to difficulty ~}~ese characters for daily use alone in handling Chinese characters. In exceeds 1,900. It is, therefore, diffi- September, 1978, Toshiba marketed a cult to limit the number of Chinese word pmcessor capable of processing Japanese vwrds for the first tir.u. It characters, called kanji in Japanese. was followed by Sharp, NEC, Fujitsu, ~d a kanji often has several ways of . Oki Electric and others. The full- reading it. There are also homonyms. scale marketing of word processors 'Iherefore, the input of Japanese in Japan began during the second half Words.is very difficult. In a system, of last year. Shipments in fiscal 1980 letters are selected by the pen-touch totaled about 2,000 units. The figure of tablets as those of a Japanese language typewriter. In another for fucal 1981 is estimated to surpass 3,000 units. system, kana (Japanese alphabet) is ~'The word processor can call out used for input. The former systern is from its memory such standardized ~e~~ but requires skills, and the time sentences as those for contract and required to select letters is longer than personal appointment formats, fill in u? the latter system. The former type is more popular in clerical offices, while 8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400054423-7 FOR OFFICIAL US~ UNLY the computer and technical divisions languages~-xport dependency is prefer the latter type. Sharp represents extremely high, and the 1980 output the former system, while Toshiba increased sharply with brisk exports. represents :he latter type. The fact that production growth in Even in the kana-kanji conversion value was higher than in volume indi- - system, there are two formulas. One is cates that production is shifting to to take the reading kana of kanji into high-grade products. While the manual the machine as it is read. The other is type showing steady growth, the to put two letters of kana which electric type is malcing big increases. suggest the kanji. In July, 1981, The most advanced typewriter is an Toshiba announced a model of Japa� electronics�applied model. nese language word processor, "BW- In the marketing of electronic 20," which combines the two typewriters, Olivetti of Italy took the formulas, and also can select a tablet lead. It was soon follow~ed by makers type. It is still too early to predict of West Germany and the United which type will be the popular line. States. Among Japanese makers, On the other hand, NEC marketed Brother Industries was the first to have a Japanese language word processor of developed that type. It began export- cluster system in May, 1981. It can ing such products last yeaz. Silver handle up to eight work stations for Seiko announced an electronic model input use so as to raise the cost effi- in March, 1981. Canon, which had not ciency of the word piocessor, because made typewriters, recently entered the Japanese language printer attached this field of business. Olivetti made a � to the machine is expensive and of a commission contract with Tokyo Juki high speed model. Industrial for production on the OBM Ricoh plans to mazket two types of basis. Olivetti probably considered it Japanese language word processors. profitable to commission the manu- One is "RIPORT 600 Series," which facture of its products to Japanese has a facsimile function - the first of industry which is leading the world in the kind in the world. Thus the word electronics. processor will incorporate many func� The electronic typewriter has edit- tions to connect with other kind of ing function and is expected to show a business machines in the future big market expansion b;~ playing an models. Models for Chinese or other important part in the current office languages that do not use the alphabet automation boom. In other words, a will be developed in the future. new area of busi~ess has opened for . _ . . Japan which is advanced in electronic technology. It is quite conceivable that even electronic equipment makers - Typewriters will enter this ~eld in the future. Electronic Application Widens Scope According to MITI's production statistics, typewriter production in 1980 totaled 2,587,975 units (up 33.9% over 1979), Jalued at ~51,816 million (up 393%). Exports rose by 48.2% to ~f48,888 million. The ratio of exports to the total output was 94.3%. Most products are of European 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Electrotic Calculators The domestic market, in ~fact, is in _ a saturated state, but makers are trying Multi-functions to expand their market by marketing new mfldels with multi�functions, such Technological advances in semi- as melody, watch and digit-taking canductor and display enabled great (million or billion) functions. functional improvements of the In July, 1981, Casiu Computer, the electronic cal~~ilatoz: reduced its sue top mak~r, marketed FT-7, a new and lovu~ered its price during the fust calculator incorporating "hobby func- = half of the 1970s. As a result, the tions" - telling one's fortune and market giew rapidly, whi~e t~ie number affinity with another person by using of manufacturers increased and they the data of the year, month and day. continued to expand productir,n. In In March and April, Casio marketed two 1977, how~ever, they were farced to programmable electronic calcula4ors carry out large production cutbacks ~ pocket-size notebooks, which have and norganize their industry. It was ~e functions of a personal computer. once thought that growth . of the Sharp Corp., which has long been industry had come co a halt. But ~y~g ~~r batteries of single crystal growth is now retusning to the indus- silicon for light house and other uses, try again. marketed an electronic calculator with ! According t~ MITI's prodLCtion a built-in solar battery in December, statistics, th.z output fell from 1976. This product, free from the 40,426,133 units in 1976 to trouble of replacing dry cells, main- 31,835,113 units in 1977. The annual tains steady popularity. The only fall was 21.3%. Exports were problem was that the solar battery was I 2g,170,000 units in 1977, down expensive. The price has now dropped I 19.9�!0. It appeared that both domestic considerably thanks to mass produc- anci overseas markets were flooded ~~tion and technical advances. The ' with excessive quantities of products. "solar calculator" cost ~f24,800 each And, many makers disappeared from when it was first marketed. The most I _ the markets. inexpensive model now carries price With only a yeaz of production tag of only ~F3,900. Sanyo ElecVic adjustment, the 1978 output went ~s marketing a similar product with a below the 1976 level in value but solar battery of amorphous silicon. above that in volume. The output in 'The efficiency of this battery is lower 1979 increased further in volume but than that of the single crystal silicon, was still below the 19761eve1 in value. but its production cost is likely to The product became smaller and thin- fall faster than the single crystal one. ner, and the price declined further. Canon, ranking third in this field of Competltion was also intensifying b~ess, marketed a calculator with a among makers. It was especially harsh digit-taking function last year. In between Casio Computer and Sharp, March of this year it added a watch two leading makers in this country. that shows the date, hour and minute The output in 1980 totaled with Chinese characters. Casio Com- 60,356,160 units, up 31.2% over puter also marketed a model with 1979. Its value was ~F202,279 million, a display in Chinese chazacters and ' up 16.3%. Exports rose by 37.4% to a di~t�taking fu.nction. New products I 49,650,000 units. Electronic calcu� are likely to become increasingly lator business fully regained activity. multi�functional in the future. 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFF`.ICIAL USE ONLY Electronic Cash Registers New Electronic Products - Systematization In P~r~uit of Poaeibility Electronic cash registers began re� The davelopment of office equip- placing the mechanical type in 1971. ment in recent years ow~es much to In the market of inechanical cash incessant advances in ekctronic registers, NCR Japan (subsidiary of technology. In fact, some new prod- NCR Corp. of the U.S.) and other ucts, which appear to be quite pro- firms with foreign capital had been mising, are be~nning to emerge. ~ dominating Tokyo Ele~tric and other One such praduct is an electronic _ Japanese makers. However, Tokyo translator. In November, 1979, Sharp Electric and NCR Japan began market- marketed an English-Japanese, Japa- ing electronic cash registers at about nese-English electronic translator, the same time. They were followed by IQ 3000. It is, of course, made by Sharp, Casio Computer, OMRON an application of technology in Tateishi Electronics, Sanyo Electric, electronic calculators. Japanese words - Matsushita Communication Industrial appear in Romanized form in the and o2her electronic equipment manu- display. Later Sharp marketed facturers; and the market structure modules for German, French, Spanish ~ changed drastically. Export business and other languages. It is for beginners has also become active. At present, and far from practical use. If the Tokyo Electric, top maker, and NCR cnemory capacity is expanded, it can Japan, 2nd, hold a combined domestic b~ more useful. In the meantime, market shaze of 80%. Canon_ and Casio Cornputer also According to MITI's production ~ marketed similar products, and still statistics, the output of cash registets other makers announced the manufac- in 1980 was 1,143,178 units, up ture of test models. 30.2% over 1979. It was valued at In June, Sharp marketed IQ 5000, - ~f86,882 million, up 12.2%. Exports in an ekctronic translator that can that year rose by 37.9% to 860,000 produce voice by using voice synthe- units. The growth of domestic demand sization techniques, wh?ch have shor.m was about 10�!0. Thus exports pushed a remarkable progress during the past up production. The average price is few years and have been applied to declining every year. Exports are practical use in various fields. expected to increase for years to In March, 1978, Nippon Electric - come, since mar.y users overseas are Co. (NEC) marketed a voice input still using mechanical type products. device for specified speakers, DP�100. Meanwhile, an increasing number of This unit recognized a registered department stores, supennarket chains voice pattem and gives instructions - and other big retailers are systematiz� made by the speaker of that pattern to ing the managemenC~ of sales that a computer. This is the first device in involves cash registers. To meet their the world that ca$ recognize continu- demands. some major cash register ous sounds. In March, 1980, NEC also makers have established subsidiaries to marketed a voice input device that specialize in software. would respond to unspecified voice 11 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY pattems, although the number of words it could recognize was only 16. Since vowl sounds are clear in Japa- nese, its voice recognition is rolatively easy compared with other languages. Toshiba announced a test model of the Japanese langua~e word processor ' with a voica input unit. Users of office equipment have great expectations for development of a high performance voice input device, because data input is one of the most troublesome parts of data processing in the current system. As office automation advances, demand for an elevation in the performance of office equipment is becoming increasingly strong from among its users. In this field, too, the Japanese office equipment industry ' will continue to show striking advances, since Japan holds a domi- . nant position in electronic technology . for non-military use. COPYRIGRT: Diam~oad Lead Co., Ltd. 1981 CSO: 4120/310 12 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENC~ AND TECHNOLOGY , ~ USSR SEEKS LOWER INTEREST RATE FOR PURCHASING STEEL Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 968, 18 Aug 81 p 3 /~ext% 'fie Soviet Union has re- to lasing all steet exports to the jected its earlier agrameM o~ Soviet Union, not only for this Cinancing terms set for secur- year 6ut also for aext year, the ing 300,00~ tons e! stetl piates Japanese steeknakers are now trnm five big Japanese steel- going to ask the International makers. acrnrding to steel ia- 'l~ade ~ I~dustry Ministry and dustry informaMs hae. the Ministry of Finance to at- 'I1~e Russians in the mid~e of low them to "export at 7.25 per July had agreed to accept such cent." steel at a financing term ot 7.75 A mission of Japanese steel- per cent per anman over ~five makers and traders in the mid- years. dle of July visited Moscow and However, the informants said reached an agreement with the that the Russians lately~ had Russians on the following made known through trader terms for export of steel plates: Mitsui & Co. that they wished to -Three himdred tho~sand ~ drop this a~eement and in- tons et steel plates will be ex- te+nded to forego the steel deal ported during the period from unless the interest rate in October to July, next yeaz with financing was lowered to 7.25 supplier's credit offered on a per cent. private basis. The Russians were said to -The deferred payment in- have come around to taking a terest rate will be set at 7.75 strong buyer's position since all per cent per annum over a - Eurapean steelmakers, which period of five years as in the have been carrying out big pra earlier agreed case of the duction curtailments owing to Japanese exporting large dia- the recession, have begun of- meter steel pipes. fering financing terms of .7.25 With this understanding, all , per cent or less per anniun for that had remained, until the their exports. Ru4sians' scrapping of this Since refusing to match their financing term, was the ques- - sales conditioas with those of tion of boiling down prices by the Europeans may lead them the early part of August. . COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 - 13 FOR OFFICIAL i 1~F. ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TE~EINOLOGY JAPAN-U.S.-SWEDEN COALITION SET FOR ROBOT PRODUCTION, SALES Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in Eaglish Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 7 _ /Text/ p far-reaching coalition prises to work together in the ~ lggg, the Connecticut com- among influential enterprises rapidly g,rowing rotwt b~iness, ~y ~~lud~d an agreement of Japan, the U.S. and Sweden as exemplified in an eazlier tie- Wi~ ~W~aki to provide its will be realized around October up arrangement between t~~ological lmow-how. At in the field of high efficiency in- Japan's Hitachi, I.td. and ~.~nt, ~wever, the tie-up dustrial robots. America's General EleCtric Co. h~ ~anged into an equal tech- Kawasaki Heavy. Industries, cJEJ August 11 issue, Page 7) ~~ogy exchange contract, now Ltd., Japan's leading rnaker oi Other specific factors under- ~~at the Japanese firm has at- heavy machinery as well as in- lying the planned tie-up among ~ined a remarkabie tech- I dustrial robots. and Unimation, the trio are: nological improvement of Inc., America's top robot -ASEA, while sta~ng robot producing 700 units a year. builder, will team up with sales drive in the U.S., has be- go~ ~mpanies now sell Sweden's ASEA (Allmanna gun to face strong rivalry frnm their robots in Europe as well Svenska Elektriska AB) in the Japan-built robots in its home ~~e U.S. sector of "intelligent" robots markets i~ Europe. When the trio works together, - equipped with human eyesight -Unimation is strongly~seek- ~heir combined production of function. ing an even claser link with t~gn gra~e robots will come to ' 'll~e international ~ouping Kawasaki HI, which represes~ts some 2,000 units a year - about will go beyond, in importance~ robot makers in Japan, a 3p per cent of the world the existing technological tie-up "rnbot kingdom" ~where 70 per markets. between Kawasaki HI and cent of the world's industrial Adjustrnent of production Unimation, aiming at attaining robots are now used. . models among the three com- even more broader cooperat~on ASEA, with 40,000 workers panies in accordance with their as to technology, production under its payrnll, is a leading respectively strong branches and marketing. European heavy machinery will prove greatly effective in - Kawasaki HI has basically maker. Late last year, the cutting production costs, lead- agreed on Unimation's company .completed a robot- ing ~o more expansion of their proposal that ASEA join their producing factory ~in Detroit. combined market share. group. Its robot production capacity All of the trio will aiso be able - UnimatiQn President Joseph th~ stands at 500 units a year. to mutually use their individual F. Engelberger is expected to 'lt~e company has sold a total of sales networks. visit Japan in Octobec to confer 1,000 robots to 20 countries of Kawasaki and Unimation are with Kawasaki executives on the world. now jointly developing an even details of the proposed coalition Unimation, the world's top- more sophisticated, intelligent with the Swedish company. rate rnbot maker, produces 800 robot for simultaneoas market= Behind their move is the ris- units a year for delivery chiefly ing in Japan and the U.S. in a ~ ing zeal of worldwide enter� to General Motors Corp. and few years. ASEA is expected to other automakers. join this project. . COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 � 14 ~ ~ ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY TOSHIBA MACHINE LOSES SOVIET DFALS Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 7 LText% Toshiba Machine Co. has Also under the new Soviet been underbid by European plan, inquiries amounting to competitocs in all of its ma- around ~ 25 billion had been re- chine tool export deals with the ceived by Toshiba Machine Soviet Union under the latter's since late last year. llth five-year plan beginning However, the situation has ~ this year. turned unfavorable for the 'I1ie persistent climb of the Japanese company. It has suf- yen's exchange rates against fered crushing defeats in the the German mark and other Soviet deals, losing horizontal European currencies is to boring machine contracts to blame for the failure of Toshiba West German and Italian com- Machine to win Russian orders. petitors and roll grinding ma- 'Ihe Tokyo-based company chine contracts to West Ger- surmotuited the first oi! crisis man rivals. in 1973-74 by emphasizing ex- A Toshiba Nlachine official ports to the Soviet Union,' said, "We could not enter into Romania and other Communist full talks with the Russians to Bloc countries. explain the capabilities and Toshiba Machine, along with specifications of our products another Japanese machine tool in almost all of the proposed builder, Mitsui Seiki Kogyo Co., deals. Our approaches came is highly dependent on exports out unsuccessful in the very ini- to Soviet Russia. Its exports to tial stage of quoting prices. the country under the lOth five- 'It~ere were wide gaps between year plan ran to some 18 bil- our price quotations and those lion. of European makers." COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE A1V~ TECI~TOLOGY CATERPILIAR MITSUBISHI SELLS 400 BULLDOZERS TO USSR Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 7 /Text/ - ~ Csterpillar Mitsubishi Ltd. Japan-built bulldozers and lifts and truck cranes. announced last week that the other construction machines As for Caterpillar ~Iitsubishi, company had concluded a con- are due to be exported to Soviet the company so far has ex- tract with the Soviet Union to R~sia in exchange for Siberian ported 1,900 bulldozers, in- supply 400 bulldozers and lumber under the basic agree- cludng 1,700 delivered under related equipment, worth some ment signed between the two the first and second KS ~ 7 billion, for delive~y+ to countries in March, this year Projects. The newly-contracted Siberia by February,1982. on the basis of the third Soviet- 400 will ~be in addition to them. Trader Mitsubishi Corp. Japan joint Far East Forestry These construction acted as the intermediary Resources Development machinery export deals with negotiator in the export deal. ~'oject, called the KS Project. the Soviet Union coincide with The value of Japanese con- the Japanese Government's Each of the tractors with struction machinecy set in the policy of easing economic sanc- powershift transmission, basic accord amounts to ~230 tions against the country from weighing 17.5 tons, is of the billion in all, in which Cater- aroimd last spring. medium-sized D6D trace type pillar Mitsubishi's 400 bull- Construction machinery having 142 horsepower. T'he dozers have recently been irn builders, now suffering from . machines will be equipped with cluded. Other desired Russian sluggish domestic demand, are a straight blade and ripper for items include 1,100 more bull- anxious to wIn Russian orders excavation work on frozen dozers, 2,000 lucnber transport following Catecpillar Mitsu- ground. , machines, and 50U to 1,000 fork- bishi's successful deal. COP'~RIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 16 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICiAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ~ SUI~T~IO MET.AL WILL PROVID~ U.S. STEEL WITH PIPE TECHNOLOGY Tokyo JAPAN ECON~iIC JQURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81, p 6 LText/ ~ Sumitomo Metal Industries, patch its technicians and Ltd. has concluded a contract engineers to its ~imerican with United States Steel Corp., partner shortly and begin an the America's largest steel- investigation. maker, to provide technical aid -Sumitomo will check for a seamless pipe mill, the ~whether improvement should leading Japanese steel firm an- be made on facilities and nounced last week. production of the two plants Under the contract, Sumi- and submit a report to U.S. tomo Metal will help the U.S. Steel. firm improve the quality of its _U.S. Steel will send its seamless pipes produced at its staffers to Sumitomo for train- two plants - one in Ohio and ing in Japan. the other in Pennsylvania and ~ for the schedule of sending upgrade the technology for engineers, the two companies operating the two plants. will negotiate on the matter in The Japanese company so far the near future. ~ has given technical assistance The American company of various kinds to the U.S. steelmaker, such as for pcoduc- ~ught the Japanese assistance - ing large-diameter pipe. The largely because the pipe latest seamless pipe contract m~ng machinery at its two constitutes the fifth agi~eement plants are outdated, causing a between the two companies. lack of uniformity in quality. Sumitomo and U.S. Steel 4Peration of the two plants thus have yet to boil down detailed have �become inefficient, ac- points concerning the technical cording to Sumitomo. , help. But they agreed that: Sumitomo Metal is rated high -Sumitomo Metal will dis- in seamless pipe technology. - CCIPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 17 z~nu n~~rrr ~~vT v APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH ON LASER RESISTANT OPTICAL FILM Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 13 /Text/ 11~e Government�affiliated costs. ment of such filming with the Research Development Corpo- a?ccording to the corporation, lens ~r reflector surface. ration of Japan recently an- laser beams, now widely used Tne academica.lly-devised ~ nounced two new projects: 1) for industrial processing, com- a.r~swer to the p:oblem consists Development of a method to munication and medical pur- in building a multiple-layer produce optical film resistant poses, in the case of industrial structure of 20 to 40 alternate to the destructive power of pcoduct or material processing, piles of high-refraction mate- strong continued laser beam require many kinds of filmir.g rials like titanium oxide and bombardment, and 2) Develop or plating to the surface of che zirconium oxide and low-re- ment of a method obtaining lens and reflector of the pro- fraction materials like silicon energy by gasifying plastic- cessing machine. Inclu%~ed in oxide. 11~e method also in- containing industrial waste s~h kinds are a"bear.i reflec- volves a"high-frequeacy ion matter deep in a hot sand pile. tion prev~ting" typ~ to let the plating" process to heat cach According to the corporation 'beam penetrate its object well such material into thin filming in Tokyo, the two methods, al- by minimizing the, undesitable with a high-frequency electric ready developed in their basic reflections, a beam reflec- ~ power coil and a special film ideas respectively by Prof. tion-boosting type to increase polishing pracess to remove all Yoichi Murayama of Toyo the reflections to assist the pre- defects on the s~face of such University in Tokyo and Prof. venting type, and multiple- filming. Taizo Kunii of the Engineering layer polarizing plating to The scholarly solution to the FacWty, University of Tokyo, separate the beam into various also difficult plastic-involving will be polished up into really componenEs. waste burning question is to applicable processes by two While such filming and plat- mix such waste matter with domestic companies it has ing have been developed, every heated sand in a funnel-shaped named to ~dertake the jobs as attempt to increase the output inversely conical furnace. usual with all its projects of the of the laser beams has come to Pastics in such wastes, includ- kind. The two companies are demand a new kind of such ing milk and other beverage- Showa Optical Co. and Tsuki- filming strong and durable vending containers, will be shima Kikai Co., both of Tokyo. enou~ against the destruMive heated into gas at the bottom of Showa Optical is to develop force of such beam bombard- the f~nace when the hot sands the first of inethods for the ments, especially when long are circulated by air blowing corporation in three years at a continued. But the conventional through a lower side hole. The - total cost of ~f 120 million, while vacuum deposition method of gas to be thus derived will have Tsukishima Kikai the second in producing such filming has at least 2,000 kilocalories of . two years for a total cost of been limited in ensuring such energy per cubic meter, high ~ 250 million. The goverm- strength of ~lming, and also in enough to be used as an indus- mental corporation will pay the guaranteeing the good attach- trial fuel. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/3].2 18 ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OF'FICI ~.L USE ONLY SC:IENCE AND TECfINOLOGY SATELLITE FOR WEA1'~R USE IS LAUNCHID Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 Na 268, 18 Aug 81 p 13 /Text/ The National Space Develop- ment Agency su~zeeded last 'h~esday in placing a 292-kilm- gram meteorological sa'te16i2e into a drift orbit. The satellite, chrisRened Himawari (Sunflower) II, w~ll - be gradually moved to a per- manent geostationary 4rbit over IVew Guinea at a p~int 140 East Longitude over a space of a month. It wiU replace the present Himawari satellite and start sending pictures of cloud � formations around Japan from late December. _ NSDA launched a three-stage N-2 rocket early Tuesday morning at its space center on Tanegashima Island, Kago- shima Pref. The rocket placed the sateUite, measuring 2.15 meters in diameter and 3.45 meters in length, into its sched- uled orbit. This is the first time that Japan has launched -a geostationary meteorological satellite (GMSr for practical ~e on its own. The present Himawari satellite was sent up with the help of U.S. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 19 _ Cl~D ACL'f~`~ ~ � ����r. /?*tT V APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHI~IOLOGY � TORAY MAKES ZIRCON7A CERAMIC HAVING HIGH BENDING STRENGTH Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 13 fText/ . ' A new engineering ceramic, tures zirconia itself may with- havzng the world's highest bend- stand, but its sinter cannot, in ing strength of all such modern contrast to other kinds of new industrial ceramics at coom ceramic like silicon nitride or temperature, t~as been commer- silcon carbide. cially developed by Toray How to bake the new _ Industries, Inc. of Tokyo. The product's materials, a ceramic is a sort of sinter of ~W~red form~ of the salt zirconia (Zirconium oxide) with remaining after smelting zir- a 3 per cent yittria (yittrium ro~~.rontaining ore, and oxide) addition. yittria under a high pressure is According to the first-rated said to be the same as pro- Japanese synthetic Gber maker ducing any other engineering with many chemical sidelines, ceramic, the company ex- its new" engineering ceramic plained. � , ~ - fine ceramic or new ceramic in Japan s technolo- But the new product, as so gical terminology-could be far tested, proved to have _ widely applied to tools, ma- m~~~ s~'~8~ to with- chine parts and cutting edg~, standing between 150 and 170 . requiring such high bending ~ograms of weight per square strength or toughness, includ- millimeter, compared with 130, in wire-drawing dices. hitherto the worlcl's highest for . The Government's Mechanic a silicon nitride ec;uivalenG , al Engineering Laboratory, In toughness cas expressed by cooperating to find such uses, is "Young's modul~s" it has already trying out the new s~passed all sorts of fine product in making sur~cal and ceramics so far known to have cooking knives. The new been developed. Such modern ~ product is believed w~fit for use ceramic have had the common under extremely high tempera- drawback of brittleness. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 ~ 20 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R400404050023-7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONI.Y . SCIENCE AND TECFIIdOLOGY ASAHI GIASS PLANS USING ION EXCHANGE MEI~RANE TECHNOLOGY Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 12 LText% Asahi Glass' Co. is con-' 35 per cent. sidering replacing the asbestos The Asahi know-how diaphragm with the ion eliminates consumption of change membrane technique steam, as required by the dia- for ca~tic soda production at phragm process cabout 2.7-3.0 its Kita-Kyushu . plant by the tons per to~ of 35 per cenf - spring of 1982. The top soda sodal. The diaphragm tech- maker here will become the nique requires larger amount second after Kanegafuchi of power ~2.700-2,800 kilowatt Chemical Industry Co. to carry hours). out the change. The soda industry replaced The Asahi plan calls for about two-thirds of its mercury replacing one half of Kita- celis with the diaphragm tech- Kyushu facilities, whose ni9ues by fiscal 1975, as or- munthly capacity is rated at dered by the Government. But 1,370 tons. The existing electro- the industry found that the dia- lytic cells will remain intact, phragm technique requires with the distance between more electric power than electrodes being narrowed. mercu:y cell route ~which the No official operational data Government will in effect ban). have been announced. $ut the It seemed that the ion ex- company's experimental ~ change membrane developers, _ replacement is believed t~ have including Asahi Glass,. will reduced electric power con- intensify their licensing race sumption to less than 2,500 kila ~t only for replacement of watt hours per tan of ca,~~stic mercury cells but the dia- soda. The soda concentrati~m is phragm technology. CCJPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. ~50: 4120/312 21 ~l1D l1GLT/"T A T /11~;T. V APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CIRCUIT LINES OF 0.5 MICRON WIDTH ETCHED ON WAFER BY NEW TECf�INOLOGY Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 13 /Text/ A new ultra-microscopic gpM ~y,pe with some 600,000 The new method is a decided semiconductor circuit printing electronic elements similarly departure from the past optical method of ionization and printed. or electron beam method. It is chemical reaction type for While the First Generation tentatively known as the Elec- etching circuit lines of no more circuits require a precision trocyclotron Resonance (ECR) than 0.5 microns in width on a printing (etching) process pr~~ to do every such ex- few miliin,ieter-square silirnn going dowzi to 2 or 3 mircons ut tremely complex and dense chip has been experimentally circuit line width, the Second etching job at a stroke by the developed by a laboratory of Generation needs a more impact of ionization of Nippon Telegraph and Tele- ~p~sticated prceess reaching chemical substances and the phone Public Corp. (NfT). down to 0.5 microns in that chemical reaction in the According to NfT's Musa- width. resulting plasma. shino Electrical Communica- But NTT's laboratory, NT'T's new achievement, tion Laboratory, thE most eng8g~ in developing such W~n refined, means comple- denssly _ integrated _version. of technology since 1975 together tion ot Japan's technology of integrated circuit seiniconduc- with Nippon Electric Co. basically etching the next tors so far commercialized, (NEC), Hitachi, Ltd., and generation VLSI circuitry that is, the First Generation of F'ujitsu Limited, already has ~ong Wi~. a new high-precision very large-scale integrated cir- finished developing the Second electron beam exposure photu- cuits (VLSI), is the 64-kilobit ~eration circuit printing mask producing and an X�ray - RP?M (random access memory) ~.~~g byr Mazch, this yeac, exposure circuit transprinting type of VLSI circuits, with about ~d has since been studying method (from the original 150,000 electronic elements how to print Third Generation, pattern to wafer) jointly printed on such a tiny chip. or a 1 mega-bit RAM type, developed with the cooperating The Second Generation, capable of packing no less than rompapies on the basis of such - already developed at labora- 2.4 million elements on such a exposure devices developed tory level, is the 256-kilobit midget chip. together with Hitachi and ~ Nippon Kogaku K.K. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 22 ' ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02109: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400054023-7 FOR OFE'ICiAL USE ONLY , SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY AOUGLAS-FOKKER TFAM OFFERS FLEXZBLE T~t~IS FOR PIANE PIAN Tok.yo JAPAN ECONOMIC J~~'JRNAL i~. En~lish Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 7 1Text/ McDonnell Uouglas Corp. of partici~ation in the project with the U.S.-Dutch team, the U.S. and F'okker B.V. o( the when they visited the head because the total estimated Netherland3 have siarted i~- otfices oE Mitsubishi Heavy cost of the pcoject is yet to be viting Japanese aircratt Industries, Ltd., Kawasalu determined. makers to participate, on an Hea:y Industries, L,id. and FLp Another important con- - equal basis, in a tieup to Heaw in~dustria, Ltd., and sideration has logically held up develop a jet civii aircraR of ai,so the Civil Transport their immediate respunse. The - the 150-seater ass, in pevelopment Corp. Japanese trio, in their ca- whatever area of tht project The chairmen also visited the pacities as members of their the Japanese want. ;4linistry of International Trade association, CTDC, strongly The McDonnell Dovglas- ~ industry ar~d briefed an otfi- backed up by MITI, had been Fokker tearn extended the on their campanies' joint talking with Bceing Co. and invitation through the chair- venture ar~d invitatioa some West European aircraft men of the two compania, The McDonnell Dauglas-Fak- makers since 1980 on Japan's _ James S. McDonnell ker team welcomed any Japa- own plan to develop a similar and F. Swarttouw to nese aircraft maicer to jain the series of jet transports. three Japanese air- venture as a Eull partner frocn To complicate the matter craft companies and the outset ~ the project in any turther, a Boeing spokesman an associatior, of area, irMluding desigr~ produc- recently said his company will Japanese aircraft tion and sales. open of~cial talks with such ar,d engine makers 'Ihe two chairmen, however, Japanese companies on its own for new aircraft de- tentatively auQgested what ttuy Bi�7 jet transport development velopment be~~e~red to be the best choice project, which is said to have - The noted Amer- thc Japaneae - under- alread~� unofficially been made icarrDutch team ao- takin~ development and known to Japan with more rigid nounced last May ~~~;on of the wings and of participating conditions. their 1tDF100 development pro- aboat one-fourth of all the But Bceing is believed to ject The target date for starting ~~~ality, inc luding cost, have started a competitive regular fights is set for 1886. ~e p~j~~, move in the face of the - 'lt~e two chairmen, while in Japanese companies ap- McDonnell Douglas-Fokker Japan earlier this month, in- proached are postporring their team's wooing of the Japanese dicated their companies' ~swecs pen~ng cl~er tallrs participation in its venture. willingness to accept Japanese COPYRIGii~: 1981, *_he Nihon K~izai Shimbun, Iac. CSO: 4120/312 23 F~IR Ur'Ft~7AL 1;~F ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY . GREEN CROSS ACQUIRES INTEREST IN COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH INC. Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 268, 18 Aug 81 p 3 LText% . Green Cross Corp. last tion of viruses, and to be a - week decided to acquire a potential "wonder drug." minority interest in Colla- Although the Japanese borative Research Inc. of company's shareholding in Boston. The acquisition will CRI is small, its equity make the Osaka phar- participation in CRI is - maceUticals maker the ~rst believed to help advance _ Japanese investor in any their collaboration both in U.S. genetic engineering technology development and venture busi~ness. exchange of information. ~ Green Crdas will acquire Many of the U.S. venture 14,000 shares of CRI stock, business in the field of worth Sl million. This will be genetic engineering, which . a part of new shares the U.S. aze estimated to n~unber company is issuing. The some 50, . recently are remaining ~5 million-worth reported actively searching shares are to be purchased for major investors fmm - by Dow Chemical Co., ac- Japan and other parts of the cording to Green GYass. world. Another U.S. genetic Green Cross's equity holding engineering rnmpany, Enzo in the U.S. firm will be 1.1 Biochem of New York, has Fer cent. already set up a joint CRI and Green Cross have venture this month in Tokyo � been closely cooperatiug in with a Japanese trader in the development of inter� order to conduct joint tech- feron since last spcing when nological developmer~4 with the two firms signed an Japanese researchers, and agreement under which CRI to look for investors here. provides Green GYoss with All of the leading U.S. pcoduction knowhow for the genetic en~neering firms, gamma type of interferon. including Genentech Inc., Green Cross has thus Genex Inc. and Cetus Corp., become the first Japanese reportedly have been talking supplier. which can produce with various Japanese in- all the three types of inter- terests on possible coopera- feron - alpha, beta and tion on biotechnological re- gamma a protein be- search and capital tie-ups, in lieved to block multiplica- the past months. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/312 ~ 24 ' :IAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440400050023-7 fOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY GOVERNME~]T BEGINS II~HASIS ON DEVELOPING BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR FARMING Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 968, 18 Aug 81 p 3 /Text/ ~ Bot? the Japanese Govern- electronic counterparts, could , axat and the ruling Liberal- determine the future of every Demacratic Party have re- advanced nation. ceotly started paying sharp According to the Ministry, attention to devdoping Ja- the United States, spear- pan's maiern . biotechnology heading the world's bio- for agriculture in the belief that technical studies, has recently - such studies wil~ be of immense been reported to be pursuing importance to Japan from the intensive studies to apply bio- standpoint of guaranteeing its technology to the botanical and own food supplies over a long crop farming areas. Gne period. example is a study to create a The Ministry of Agriculture, new breed of rice to grow with- Forestry and Fisheries and out fertilization even in deserts the governmental party have by transfening a gene of some disclosed they are seriously coo- aerial nitrogen self-fixing sidering developing the agricul- plant of the pulse family (I~ tural phase of biotechnological guminous plants like beans, research in Japan. They share peas, and lentils) into the gene the current international of rice. (A similar "no- opinion that modern biolo~cal fertilizer" crop plant study is in - science and technology, in- pro~ess for years at Japan's cluding genetic engineering, National Institute of Genetics now in its most promising in Mishima, southwest of facet, could revolutionize Tokyo.) The Americans, from farming in the interest of their own standpoint of national human survival. security in food supplies, are There has been an obviously ~llecting all new eli~ble strong prompting factor. It is species of crnp plants frnm Japan's clear lag behind ~tin America and Asia to America and some advanced create a sort of "botanical gene West European nations in ~nk." Numerous American developing biotechnology, and industrial interests, including the need for Japan's combined b~8 international oil conglo- _ national and private effort to merates, have joined such catch up in this new age research along with plant breeders. wherein the new types of Japan's own basic stu~!?^s science and engineering, along ~ve been in pro~ress for years with space development and _ - � 25 r.nn nt~r.~~~ ~ ~ nw-r r~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY at the NL+nistry's Agricultural industry in Japan that would Engineering Research Station eventually be capable of ex- in Tsukuba, northeast of Tokyo. porting its knowledge and Starting in Japan's next ~scal products as a new type of ex- _ year 1982 (from April), the port industry. Ministry plans to develop such The Farty also logically sees studies for early applicability. the necessity of combining or at The initial main theme will least coordinating both govern- be "cell fusion" to develop a mental and private studies in new kind of crop plant com- Japan to get the earliest bining advantages of two or possible results. Private more species of plant by fusing exertions of the kind are their cells, a sort of gene already on going amoag engineering. Looking for seeci~ Japan's food, fertiIizer. or seed sprouts of some good, chemical, and farming equi~ fusable species of crop pl~nt, ment industries, as indicated includiAg cold temperaturt by their recent creation of a defying rice breeds or highly biotechnological joint associa- proteinous soybean b~~eeds will tion named the "New Species be among the prerequisites. Preservation and Development The Ministry will name the Research Association." All promotion of such studies as such studies will naturally be one of the top priorities in its expensive, but they are con- fiscal 1982 budgetary estimate. sidered worth a~eat amount The Liberal-Democrats, for of investments, like Japan's their part, plan to set up next past successful joint govern- month a special research panel ment-industry program to in their bid tv help build a new develop very large-scale in- agricultural biotechnoloBical tegration (VLSI) types of semi- conductor. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. - CSO: 417.0/312 26 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ SCZENCE AND TECHNOLOGY TWELVE DIFFERENT COi,ORS IDENTIFI'i:D BY UNIQUE SENSOR Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in Eaglish Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 13 /Text/ A tiny electronic color sen- cessor, which is behind them. sor capable of identifying up The processing system tells the to 12 different colors has colors of the target object by been jointly developed by the judging , From the ratio of the Nagoya Municipal Industrial three original colors to the Research Institute and a r~ whole rolor composition sen- search team of Nagoya Univer- S~, - sity. The whole device could be ~ According to the non-pro~t miniaturized, further possibly iiutitute of the industrial city of to only 3 millimeter square, Nagoya, central Japan, the but the size of the substrate color sensor it has developed has so far received little r~ ~ with the city's national search attentioa The filters ~ university engineering faculty purchased from the market team, led by Prof. Minoru could be simply mass-produced ~ Ueda, is an &millimeter-square thra~gh photcetching. silicon semiconductor substrate Signal processing system im- topped by three photodiodes provements could make the sen- and three color filters. sor just as color-sensitive as The three pi~otodiodes are human eyes. All sorts of indus- "integrated" or combined into trial application of the sensor a set of circuitry, and each are envisioned, including diode is covered with one of sorting of industrial products ,three color filters - red, blue, by color, checking of painting and green (like the basic three results and quality differenta- colors of color television). tion of fruits and vegetables, The photodiodes, receiving store front point-of-sales slip all colors through the color sorting by color and through filters, transmit them to an conversion of colors into eleo- electronic signal processing tronic sounds and helping the _ system, ir.cluding a micropTo- blind or color blind do indus- trial product sorting jobs. CCtPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/309 27 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFF1C[AL USE ONLY SCIENCE.AND TECHNOLOGH NIPFON OIL DEVELOPS FERMENTATION METHOD FOR MAKING FUEL ALCOHO~L - Tokyo JAPAN ECONOI~C JOURNAL in Eaglish Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 13 /Text/ A continuo~s fuel .alcohol= yeast holder-booster, it is producing fermentation possible to continue to obtain process, featuring stabiliaation fuel alcohol ror any other fer- - of yeast in a sponge-sryle mentation product without a nestling agent, has been ex- b~'eak and with far less loss of . perimentally developed by Ni~ yeast than the conventional pon Oil Co. and its group. meth�d' Wwch means much According to sources clase to less need for replenishing yeast the to~level Japanese oil-refin- supplies. The Nippon Oil group, includ- ing company of Tokyo, the con- ing Nippdn Petrochemicals Co., ventional fermentation process is believed to have made the of making such alcohol or other most. of the latter's highly- fermentation products is the so- advanced high molecular called batch system. It is not a- ~~i~ technology. In at- very efficient round-after- tempting commercial dev~lop~ round method of putting raw m~t of the new method, Nip~ material and yeast in a fer- pon Oil has decided to seek the mentation tub, taking out the ~ ration of K owa Hakko resulting fermented product ~ Y _ and reoeatina the process. Kogyo Co. of Tokyo, Japan's . 1~1uch yeast is lost in each top-rated fermentation food round and must be replenished. and chemical maker, and a Although details of ths new fellow member of the New Fuel process are still secret, sources Development Technology Re- believed a special synthetic search Association. The Nippon _ resin has been developed and ~ Broup has developed the reIIned into a spongy, elastic, new process as part of joint _ chemical-resistant and yeast- studies by the association active agent to hold the yeast in members. Kyowa Hakko the tub to keep it stabilized Kogyo, although developing an without mixing with the equivalent process of its own, product, a trnuble inevitable has so highly evaluated the with the conveational method. Nippon Oil group s achieve- By using the innovational ment that it plans to cooperate . in commercializing the new process. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihoa Keizai Shimbua, Inc. CSO: 4120/309 28 ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY STRUCTURAL CHANGE OF PETROCHEMICAL INDUS~RY SUGGESTED Tokyo JAPANI ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 12 lEditorial/ jext/ Expcr~s at the Induslrial Structure Couo- There is no consensus about increasing the cil's Chemical Industry Committee have availability in North America of ethane, started attempts to lind both short- and long- which is extracted from natural gas. Even term policies for the Japanese petrochemical so, it seems inevitable that external factors industry to [ollow in iight of the changing en- will increase that cause Japan to curtail its vironment, such as rising prices [or raw ethylene production. materials, slowing demand and~ rising im- It is naturally considered that Japan = ports. Tfie committee, led by Dr. Hiromi Ari- should ihvest its capital in counUies with sawa, has been urged to come up with proper jower-cost raw materials for importing inex- prescriptions to demonstrate how Japanese pensive petrochemical raw materials. 11~e industries and Government should cope with structure of Japan's industry at home should Changing condilions at home and abroad in shitt to production ofc goods with higher the 1980s. valu~added. The industry itself sees that this - The deteriorated petrochemical industry's cannot be helped. performance and gloomy outlook stem trom ~e urgent problem is to predi~t as ac- the fact that domestic naphtha is more ex- curately as possible the [rictions that such a pensive than the raw materials which U.S. new strategy will cause and to develop clear and Canadian industries use. As a result, measures [or adjustment, as made neces- U.S. and Canadian products, especially ethy- sary by the structural changes. A tinal report lene derivatives, have i~vaded the markets submitted by the Ministry of International Japanese ~NOducers had maintained at home Zyade & Industry and industry representa- and overseas. 'ltie raw material cost gap is a tives to the ISC's Chemical Ind~try Com- deep-rooted problem that also retlects the cost di[ferences in crude oil refining and dif- mittee clearly shows what Japan s(hould do to ferent strategies chemical companies can Wrestle in the 198os, including raw material take in Japan and North America. problems. The basic problem is the ethylene price: The points that deserve special attention Y 175 a kilogram in Japan, Y 110 in the U.S. are first the necessity to have the petro- and Y 75 in Canada. If the lhree countries are chemical indastry maintain its managerial allowed to continue to compete freely, capability - a prerequisite tor the envisaged _ etliylene derivatives from the~ U.S. and industrial adjustment. For that, the rnaphtha - Canada will capture Japanese shares of the price sh~rwld be set at lhe international level. m~rkets in third counlries and inerease their Seconcily, the taxes imposed on domestic shares in Japan. Thal will cat~se Japan to naphtha will have to be reduced from a reduce produclion of ethylene, caustic soda strategical viewpoint o.� the 9;~austry's need and chlorine, for example. lo shiil to products with higher value-added. 29 FOR OFFICIA~. U~E ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400450023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Finally, the industry is urged to diversify the petrochemical raw materials by utilizing residual oil and synthelic gas. That will allow . the industry to obtain raw materials which can compete with [eedstocks available over- seas. It is clear enough that both the petra chemical and oil refining industries will have to find ways tor peaceftil coexistence and m~rt,ual prosperity. It is particulazly im- portant to find measwes which will help oil ~rompanies, especially thase with no connec- tion to ioreign Crms, and petrochemical companiss rnpe with their strucl~al reces- sion and sUuctural improvement. CO~PYRIGRT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/309 30 FOR OFFICIAL U~E ONLY ; APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R440400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY f, ~ PRODIICTION REVOLtI'~ION UNDIItWAY IN FACTORIES OF SMALLER ENTERPRISES Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 11 /Article by Ratsuhiko Hirano/ 1;~ext/ ~ A veritable production suppliers on their own, offer- ran up to ~ 1,950 million in revolution is now rapidly going ing, at highly competitive fiscal 1980, although its payrolls on among small and medium prices, a wide variety of have remained at around 80 for size corporations. Such cor- products on comparatively the recent several years. porations are now actively in- limited production scale. ~~ma Seiki Seisakusho K.K. stalling in their plants indus- Maximum use of of Wakayama Prefecture, a trial robots, machining centers mecha-tronics is a major sur- manufacturer of : knitting � cMCs), numerically-controlled vival strategy of small and machines, on the other hand, ' t NC) lathes and other com- medium size corporations in has installed 30 NC machine pound machine tools, usually the new decade of the 1980s.. tools including 10 MCs. By this referred to as "mecha-tronics," This brush ~re trend for un- move, the company hopes to a Japanese English. word com- manned factories is bound to catch up and overtake the pace- - bining mechanics and elec- spread to every corner of S~ting West Ge,rman firm in tronics. The word primarily Japan in a very short while, ~e field of fully-automated _ covers the industrial field working a dramatic change in (~tting machines. Shima Seiki = which merges machinery tech- the nation's industrial struc- ~isakusho now~ controls soine . nologies with those of elec- t~e, 70 per ceat of the domestic tronics. The word has a slightly Niito Seikei K.K. of Ibaraki market for automated knitting different shade in meaning to prefecture, a maker of cassette machines. electromechar?ics used in Western countries. (See "Japa- cases for VTRs, for example, ~ough a minuscule com- nese language today" column has greatly improved its labor pany having only 25 employees, on this page.~ productivity recently by suc� Kobe Seisakusho K.K. of cessfully combining micra Tokyo, a znaker of hydroelec- 'Blue-collar shurtage~' computer-controlled plastic ex- tric parts, is now engrossed in � Small and medium size cor- truding machines with indus- ~~mechatronizing" its plant porations are even more posi- trial robots. The company has with use of four NC machine tive than their big business introduced some 50 plastic ex- tools and three indastrial counterparts in creating un- truding machines each pric a robots. The company plans to manned production facilities in ~'~~d million, equippe make a completely unmanned their hope of coping with the each one of them.with an indus- p~ant out of the present produc- ~ ~erious blue~collar shoctages trial robot and is now operating tion facilities in the nest 3 and bolstering their competi- them virtually around the years. clock. Thanks to this bold ~;njima Seisakusho of Sanjo tiveness. By so doing, many ~ want to outgrow the stage of move, the company s sales City~; .`i;~ata Prefecture, a being mere subcontractors and have been growing at an annual secondary sub-contractor of ~ turn themselves into primary rate of nearly 100 per cent and auto-making Honda Motor Co., - 31 ' FnR OFFiC_IAi. rrcF nNLY ` APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY has purchased six welding machines, but they believe that easier for small and medium robots each priced at around they have simply to do so in siae corporations to take full ~ l0 million and has more or order to survive the fierce com- ad~�antage of inecha-tronic less automated the welding petition expected for the rest of equipment. By using this com- � processes for automobile seat the 1980s. pany's services, small arid frames. 'Itie company says that Demands for mecha-tronic medium size firms can install by this step, its labor produc- equipment naturally have been in their own plants expensive tivity has quadrupled and that increasing sharply, thanks to industrial robots, each priced ~ the quality of its products has fevered enthusiasm being about of ~ 10 million, for a become greatly stabilized and Shovvn by small and medium monthly payment of some improved. size corporations. Prod~tion of ~ 100,000. Any small and Competitiveness such leading mecha-tronic medium size corporation can equipment as NC lathes. MCs afford to pay such an amount if Use of inecha-tronics by and industrial robots has been it reduces its payroll by a - small and medium size rnr- gcowing at an average annual single worker. This fact is cer- porations is rapidly spreading ~o~ rate of some 50 per tainly one reason industrial in a wide range of industrial cent. Some 60 per cent of all the robots aze now so popular fields, notably machinery, elec- demands for NC machine tools among small and medium size tro-electric machinery and ~d industrial robots come corporations. automobiles. from small and medium size Accordin6 to a survey by the According to a survey by the corporations. Small Enterprise Finance Small Enterprise Agency, more ~ Corp., investments for labor- than 45 per cent of small and Robot-leasing venture saving and eEficiency-im- medium size plants throughout ~e primary reason small proving equipments have come Japan ltotaling some 700,000) and medium size corporations, to account for 27.9 per cent of are suf~ering from perennial With limited financial 5~~~ and medium size cor- shortages of labor. This per- resources, have been enabled porations' equipment invest- centage is far higher than the to buy expensive ment pcogi~ams for the current 20 per cent of big uusin~, mecha-tronic equipment is fiscal year. '11~is percentage This fact is the primary reason that the cost performance of outstrips that for equipment-re- small and medium size cor- such machinery has improved P~acement investment for the porations are now so en- drastically in the recent first time in history. The same thusiastic about mecha-tronics. survey also reveals that small Small and medium size cor- several years. The perform- ~d medium size corporations' porations also hope to cut down ance of a weiding robot or a ~~pment investments in, the on their production costs, im- l~~ting robot, for example, ~~t ~ of the c~arent fiscal prove the quality of their ~mpares favorably with even . ear record an 11.7 r cent in- the best o[ skilled workers and y ~ products and increase their its price tag is just about 2 ~rease over. the preceding competitiveness by taking full years' pay of a skilled worker. semi-annual period thinks to advantage of inecha-tronic Establishment in April, 1980 the stesdy recovery of the machinery and equipment. of a robot~leasing venture. Ja- economy. The "mecha-tronics It is not easy for small and fever" is bound to get added medium size corporations to Pan Robot Leasing Co., a joint momentum from all these buy expensive mecha-tronic ~enture of 34 firms, including ~g~.es. robot makers, also made it C(7PYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihoa Reizai Shimbun, Iac. CSO: 4120/309 32 ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 E'OR OFFIC~AL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CABLE, WIRE MAKERS ARE INVESTING HEc~�VILY IN OPTICAL FIBER EQUIPMENT Tokyo JAPAN ECONOrIIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 9 /Text/ Japanese cable and wire are swiftly pursuing the "Big preceding year. Furukawa and companies are heavily in- 3." Oki Electric Wire Co. and Fujikura are estimated to vesting in building optical 6ber p~~n Cable Co. are going to double such sales to ~ 2.4 - production facilities. They are move into the promising billion and ~2 billion, respec- racing to seek larger shares market. ti~�ely, this year. while the fiber optic system Sumitomo has just completed The present leading position industry is still young. a fiber-optic communication of the Big 3 owes largely to the Sumitomo Electric Ind~u- system with 7,800 kilometers of joint R&D project with NTT. tries, Ltd., Furukawa Electric optical fibers for shipment to However, as NTT is moving in Co. and Fujikura Cable Works, ,~gentina by teaming up with the direction of "opening its Lid. are now running ahead of vippon Electric Co. ~NEC), a doors" to all companies, dis- others on the strength of tech- leading communications equip- carding its conventional policy niques that they have ac- ment maker. This will be of favoring ":~TT family" com- cumulated through a joint re- Japan's first full-scale fiber panies, because of mounting search and development optic communication system criticisms both within and project with the governmental export. without Japan, chances are Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Furukawa will shortly install strong that the followers will Public Corp. tNTT). NTT will a new line and boost its mon- catch up with the three fore- be by far the largest customer thl o tical fiber runners. , of optical fibers. Y P production 'It~e three leaders alread capacity to 4,000 kilometers, Cable and ~vire companies Y are very enthusiastic about have started operation of new the largest in Japan. Fujikura plans to build a new mass- production of optical fibers production lines capable of production line at its Sakura w'hich will constitute the core of producing 2,000 kilometers of Works in Cfiiba Pref. the fiber optic industry. The optical fibers a month. bIinistry of International Trade Industrymen expect that. & Industry estimates that the Hitachi Cable, Ltd., Showa Sumitomo's sales of ~ber optic Electric Wire & Cable Co. and related products in the current fiber optic industry will become Dainichi-Nippon Cables, Ltd. 1981 term will rise to ~ 5 billion a~ 100 billion-a-year business from ~ 3 billion in the in 198~. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO~ 4120/309 . 33 FnR nFFTC~Ai. ~ tcr (1NLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ? SCIENCE AND T~'CHI~TOLOGY SHIPBUILDERS MOVING TOWARD 'REVITALIZATION' - Tokyo JAPAN ECON0~4IC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 7 /Text / Seven top Japanese shipbuild- ployment will be cleared away . ers and three middle raters, by the end o[ this August when which account for almost all the a 320,OOadeadweight-ton tank- industry's bottom construction. er, the tast ship respresnting have recently started a new such expediencies, is com- long-range business redevelop~ pleted. ment drive. The ind~try has This tiscal year could already pulled out of its past be a"new Year of revival" for pcotracted b~iness recession. the industty in the light of the According to observers, the ten companies' new highly industry will completely wipe CO~~itive research prnjects . out all vestiges of its 1974-78 for energy-saving ~ merchant- ordeal, a serious demand S�me new iniwvations decline foUowing the 19'73 inter- minimize water resistance to national oil crisis, before the Propulsion aad maximize end of fisca11981. ~~1~tion of engine exhausts for on-board electric powec Both international and generation. The industry will domestic jobs have rebounded develop new business tines briskly since early 1979, In- byr making the most of their oi! ~ dicating that the industry has rig and undersea exploration apparently regained its 1974 module building technology. level of business, when it still ~e Shipbuilders' Association had been prosperous with quite of Japan will also pcovide over- a large backlog of orders. Dur- ~operation by creating _ ing fiscal 1980, the industry ~arious study committees to booked 9.29 million gross tons ~pgrade the industry's produc- of new orders. tion efficiency, including ' 'I7~e ind~stry's past practice robotization of production lines, of accepting all jobs, even at a and to create higher value- loss, in order to prevent ~em- added kinds of vessels. Order Backlogs at Najor Shipbuiiders at the End ot ~Iarch, 1981 ~ ( In blllion yee: yr�fayr chanqe in perenMes~s ~n per cenf) Shlpbuiltl~r Value CWT Mitsubisni Hesvy Induttri~s ]97.5 (+60.!) 1.SSO,OOp (+77.81 ~ IShikawa~ima�HAfima Hedvy Intlu3t~iey 791.6 (+]!.S) Z.970.000 (+~0.2) Hifacht5hipbuiltlinqbEnpineerinq............ 220.1 (+Y6.Z) Y,OS0.000(+ 1.7) Mifsui EnO~n~eriny 65hipbufldfnp 217.81+ S.OI 1.~0,000 t.~) Kawasakt Heavy Indusfrles 406.t (+1~.1) 2.090.000 (+~9.6) NiPpon Kokan K.K 157.5 7.91 1,J70,000 0.7) Sumifomo Hesvy lndustriq 10.7.0I+B7.3) 7]0,000 (+64.4) fotal . i,SIS.9 (+90.61 1~,390,000 l+41.1) Sas~bo Heavy Industries P.1 f+~7.9) 6l0.000 (+11.~) NamursShipbu~idln9 71.~(+17.1) 970.000(-4.5) SanoYasu OockYard . at.~ (+14.d) q0.000 ( 0) COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. , CSO: 4120/309 34 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY . ~ HITACHI, GE REACH OVERALL ACCORD ON ROBOT PRODUCTION, SALES Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 7 1Text% General Electric Co. of the an original equipment manu- He said the U.S. company hopes _ U.S. announced early last week facturer basis until its own to receive 50afi00 robots from that the company had signed a robot production goes on Hitachi over the next three to comprehensive business tie-up stream. four years for sale in the U.S. with Hitachi, Ltd. on the mano- GE indicated intention to under its own brand facture and sales of industrial branch out into the robot field A high-ranking Hitachi offi- robots, according to Tatsuo in the spring of this year. Since cial said that the tie-up was Morikawa, Nihon Keizai then, the company had been signed in Tokyo oa July 20. It correspondent in New York. negotiating with Hitachi on the concerned three models (for . Moriicawa quoted GE of~- production-marketing link. painting and welding) now cials as saying that behind the 'The GE-Hitachi tie is the first being produced and sold by Hi- tie-up arrangement was the un- case of Japanese robot ex- tachi in Japan and does n~t expecte*~?y rapid expansion of pertise being introduced involve develo d a or rton~ce global robot mazlcets. Tt~e swift abroad on a full-fledged basis. being PQ Simultaneousl with GE's developed in the future, he change in the robot sector was y said. said to have led GE to seek Hi- announcemenk Hitachi I'e- ~e official said that GE was tachi's expertise and products. vealed in Tokyo that the com- n would increase robot out to build up its robot division The agreement, effective Pa Y and could be expected to over the next seven years, ca1Ls production at its Narashino ~come a strong rival of Hitachi for Hitachi to provide GE with factory, Chiba Prefecture to 60 in the future. its technology and know-how on to 10o units a month from the ~ f~. ~tachi, he declared production of high efficiency p~'esent 30 to 50. that the company would con- industrial robots. . A Hitachi spokesman ex- tinue to exert utmost efforts to The U.S. company also will plained that production would develop new products in- receive Hitachi-built robots on ~ be boosted for conforming with ~~~rating its most advanced the new arranaement with GE. t~~ologies. COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/309 � 35 FOR OFFICIAL T1SE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000440050023-7 ~ FOR OFFIC[aL USE ONLY ~ SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MITI WILL EASE STAND ON E1~OR~TS TO YAMBURG PROJECT Tokyo JAPAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL in English Vol 19 No 967, 11 Aug 81 p 3 � LText% The Ministry of International because, aiter the Ottawa Russians wish to secure about Trade & Industry has decided sc:mmit, the U.S. has permitted ~ billion worth l~600 billion) on taking a flexible stand an American maker to export of e ui ment from Ja nese toward the issue of Japanese fieavy machinery to it and the q p ~ trade~ and makers su 1 in traders and makers. PP Y B West German (;overnment alsw materials and machinery for has declde.ti io permit actemion Komatsu's present negotia- the Soviet Union's Yamburg of government credits to it. tions with the Russians on ~ natural gas-pipeline project. The Yamburg project erN selling pipe-laying equipment In line with this policy, bIITI visages taying down a gas appears to come under the is said to be intending to apply pipeline running a total of scope of the S3 billion the export insurance system to about 4 400 kilometers frorn the framework. The Russians are sale of pipe-layers by Komatsu, Yamburg aatural gas field in ~eBarded to be intending to Ltd. in the event the latter suc- Western Siberia to the Czecho- order about 400 pipe-layers, cessfully concludes its present slovakian border. valued at slightly over 5100 negotiations with the Russians. It will b~ used tor trans- million. Up to now, the Ministry had portan~ ~0- bsll~oo cutxc meters As for the U.S. Commerce been taking a negative stance of gas yearly t7oo,00o barrels Department's sanctions toward the Yamburg project as daily tn terms af oili w West recently of Caterpillar Tractor ~ a part of Japan's economic European nationa, such as Wes~ Co.'s export of heavy - sanctions against the Soviet Germany, France and Italy, machinery to the USSR, it also Union. over a perlod of 2o years. involved pip~layers. However, MITI has come For reatizing the project, the The West German Govern- azound now to allowing a~ ~~518~ hope to buy abcwt t15 ment's credit to the Soviet plication of the export in- billion woeth of large aiametsr Union also was for the Yam- surance system in what would steel pipes, coa:zpressora, burg pipeline projec~ The be tantamount to easing sao- tractors ~n~ pipr-layers fr:~ Russians will get credit ctiorLS against the Soviet Union the Western nationa. Of this amounting to about 5 billion amounto it is b~lie~~ed that ihe DM. Originatly, a credit of 10 ~ billion DM had been planned. , COPYRIGHT: 1981, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. CSO: 4120/309 E~ ~ 36 ~ FOR O!~ FICIAL US~ ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050023-7