
Dec. 19, 2022
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Jan. 25, 2023
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BATTERY SECTOR ROADMAP SAYS: JAPAN NEEDS
MORE PLANTS, MORE MONEY, MORE PEOPLE
With a focus on lithium-ion chemistry and all-solid-state technologies, METI’s Battery Industry Strategy sees domestic firms creating more battery capacity by 2030 than is being installed globally today. The Strategy details not only the volumes, but also estimates the investments required to set up component and unit manufacturing, and the money needed for the procurement of raw materials. The challenges to delivering such a vision are grand, such as the need to reduce the domestic price of electricity.
ENERGY JOBS IN JAPAN:
THE IMPORTANCE OF STABILITY
In the U.S. about 73% of new graduates ranked job stability as their top priority when choosing an employer. In Japan, this prioritization of stability is nothing new. The country’s belief system still promotes the premise of lifetime employment. Also, social status is often linked to the prestige of your company’s name, much more than your job title or income. To illustrate the importance of social status, some time ago one of our clients shared an interesting story…
GLOBAL VIEW
Argentina secured $689 million from Brazil’s state bank, BNDES, to finance the second stage of a natural gas pipeline. President Putin wants to increase gas supplies to Asia, particularly China. EU wind turbine makers will face a tough 2023. To keep the lights on, Berlin has spent an unplanned €440 billion on energy this year. India approves building 10 more reactors. Details on these and more in our global wrap.
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K. K. Yuri Group
Editorial Team
Yuriy Humber (Editor-in-Chief)
John Varoli (Senior Editor, Americas)
Mayumi Watanabe (Japan)
Yoshihisa Ohno (Japan)
Wilfried Goossens (Events, global)
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Chisaki Watanabe (Japan)
Takehiro Masutomo (Japan)
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OFTEN USED ACRONYMS
| METI | The Ministry of Energy, Trade and Industry | mmbtu | Million British Thermal Units | |
| MOE | Ministry of Environment | mb/d | Million barrels per day | |
| ANRE | Agency for Natural Resources and Energy | mtoe | Million Tons of Oil Equivalent | |
| NEDO | New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization | kWh | Kilowatt hours (electricity generation volume) | |
| TEPCO | Tokyo Electric Power Company | FIT | Feed-in Tariff | |
| KEPCO | Kansai Electric Power Company | FIP | Feed-in Premium | |
| EPCO | Electric Power Company | SAF | Sustainable Aviation Fuel | |
| JCC | Japan Crude Cocktail | NPP | Nuclear power plant | |
| JKM | Japan Korea Market, the Platt’s LNG benchmark | JOGMEC | Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security | |
| CCUS | Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage | |||
| OCCTO | Organization for Cross-regional Coordination of Transmission Operators | |||
| NRA | Nuclear Regulation Authority | |||
| GX | Green Transformation |

Govt takes action to expand JCM for private sector
(Japan NRG, Dec. 13)
TAKEAWAY: Opening the JCM system to projects wholly financed by the private sector will expand its scope significantly, helping the country reach its 2030 credit goal. Presently, international companies can’t take active roles in government-funded JCM projects and the guidance should be of great interest to many multinational businesses.
METI: Emissions trading to launch in 2026, “GX surcharge” in 2028, allowance auction in 2033
(Japan NRG, Dec. 14)
TAKEAWAY: As is now usual, at the end of the year METI launches a flurry of major announcements that could play a big impact on future developments. This latest 100-page document is a blockbuster of data and policy. There are details on GX fundraising and spending that may become more important in 2023. Japan NRG will continue to review the changes and offer commentary as the situation develops.
METI plans to build 8 key hydrogen/ammonia supply bases
(Japan NRG, Dec. 12)
TAKEAWAY: METI seeks speedy infrastructure solutions, but technologies from well-to-gate are still developing. One panel member said there may be other technologies, such as synthetic fuels, with superior properties to ammonia/hydrogen; all possible options need to compete.
The other issue that may slow down the development of these bases is the need for local buy-in. Technically, local governments are supposed to lead the formulation of the base plans, though it will undoubtedly be industry players that help to draft them.
LDP members want the replacement of nuclear reactors in the year-end GX statement
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 14)
TAKEAWAY: Lawmakers and the industry are keen to make sure that the decommissioning of aged reactors does not deplete the overall nuclear capacity. Also, it may be easier logistically to have new construction ongoing at one site while there are decommissioning works at another.
Nuclear regulator asks for additional approval rights outside of operating license terms
(Asahi Shimbun, Dec. 15)
TAKEAWAY: Operating nuclear facilities within all the rules and regulations is already a highly bureaucratic and labor-intensive task. Utilities must submit some 10,000 pages of documents to the NRA for restart approvals of each reactor unit. Introducing a new system will add to the workload on both the utility and regulator side. And while the regulator is willing to let the operators submit their documents ahead of time to allow for an adequate period, the possibility that a facility is taken offline because of inadequate paperwork or additional questions from the NRA is not small.
The introduction of a new system will likely make the nuclear industry seem safer in the eyes of the public, which is important at a time when operators and the government seek approval to move forward with construction of new nuclear facilities. However, there are 17 reactors in Japan that have already passed the 30-year mark. If they are all subjected to additional reviews, something is sure to slow down. That will be either the restart of existing units, the review of older units for life extensions, or the formulation of rules for next-generation technologies. The size of the NRA’s staff seems too small to cope with all the above at the same time.
METI is to build database to promote recycling of solar panels
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 16)
TAKEAWAY: METI expects that the disposal of solar panels could peak in the second half of 2030s. Therefore, METI is now preparing for that period of mass disposal.
Japan to host first ministerial meeting of the Asia Zero Emissions Community
(Asia Nikkei, Dec. 15)
Japan will share risk with financial institutions to invest in new green technologies
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 14)
TAKEAWAY: Blended finance for green energy technology is supposed to function like the current role performed by NEDO and NEF (New Energy Foundation). But as those state organizations are under a ministry (such as METI or MoE), a new cross-sectoral financial mechanism needs to be established to develop innovative green technologies.
Toyo Engineering to convert fertilizer ammonia to green fuel in Indonesia
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 13)
TAKEAWAY: In May 2022, METI tapped Toyo Engineering to do a feasibility study for green ammonia production in collaboration with PIHC. Thus, this collaboration seems to have been planned thanks to METI oversight.
Pupuk Iskandar Muda (PIM) fertilizer plant


IHI starts feasibility study to produce ammonia in Malaysia
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 16)
MHI to study ammonia co-firing at coal power plant in Chile
(Company statement, Dec. 7)
Toyota and Thailand’s CP Group to produce hydrogen from farm waste
(Company Statement, Dec. 14)
Euglena mulls $1 billion biofuel refinery in Malaysia for SAF
(Nikkei Asia, Dec. 15)
Mitsui mulls $550 million bioplastics factory in the U.S.
(Asia Nikkei, Dec. 14)
Tokyo solar bylaw prompts vigorous debate
(Tokyo Shimbun, Dec. 12)
One-Dot Wrap

Transmission companies now allowed to select power sources aiding renewables
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 15)
TAKEAWAY: The new approach is described as the Japanese version of the “Connect and Manage” system, which allowed more generation capacity to connect to the grid before the transmission network was upgraded. Under this new system, the discretion of grid operators would increase.
Non-firm Grid Connection Mechanism

Kawasaki Heavy mulls hydrogen-fired power plant in Japan by FY2030
(New Energy Business News, Dec. 14)
Japanese wind developers concerned about shortage of offshore wind turbines from EU
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 16)
TAKEAWAY: According to the consortium’s regulatory filing, the wind turbines will be built more than 10 meters below sea level to protect marine resources in shallow waters. Furthermore, the group will be discrete in selecting the sites for the installation to preserve biodiversity in the area.
Nara area to ask all solar developers of a certain size to get governor’s permission
(New Energy Business News, Dec. 16)
MLIT pledges to develop 2.3 GW of renewable energy at airports by 2030
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 15)
Kansai Electric restarts Unit 3 at Ohi NPP
(Company statement, Dec 15)
Influx plans 600 MW offshore wind farm in Saga area
(New Energy Business News, Dec. 13)
JRE plans onshore wind farm in Kagoshima area
(New Energy Business News, Dec. 13)
Toshiba runs its own geothermal power plant for the first time: Seeks increase demand
(Nikkei Business; Dec. 13)
Kansai Electric might launch VPPs across Japan
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 15)
Nippon Steel and partner get order to build offshore wind power plant in Fukuoka
(Kankyo Business, Dec. 15)
Tokyo Gas to issue ¥19.8 billion in transition bonds
(Denki Shimbun, Dec. 15)
JFTC throws book at power companies
(Toyo Keizai, Dec. 17)
TAKEAWAY: As of Dec 15, the JFTC has not issued formal decisions on the alleged cartel case, following its Dec 1 letter to the companies informing them they were under cartel charges. The actual amount of the penalties and details of leniency applications have not been disclosed yet.

Idemitsu vows to cut oil refining capacity by a third, switch facilities to clean fuels
(Jiji Press, Dec. 16)
Russia says Japan will get Siberian LNG starting late 2023
(Chosun Online, Dec. 15)
LNG stocks rise to 2.68 million tons
(Government data, Dec. 15)
Japan’s Nov LNG, coal and LPG imports fall, oil rises
(Government data, Dec. 15)
TAKEAWAY: Due to high LNG stocks in Japan and also in Europe, as well as warmer winter temperature forecasts in some areas and more nuclear plants operational, analysts say spot LNG demand peaked in August. However, demand could spike again depending on politics, weather and unexpected supply disruptions.
Copper surplus to expand in 2023 on slowing China demand: PPC forecast
(Japan Metal Bulletin, Dec. 13)
TAKEAWAY: The International Copper Study Group, an organization of copper producers, also forecasts a 155,000 tons surplus for 2023, after seven deficit years. China’s slowing copper appetite may put downward pressure on other commodities including battery metals.
BASED ON MATERIALS PUBLISHED IN SHIN ENERGY SHINPO
Road to Japan’s Battery Future:
METI Sets Goals for Developing the Burgeoning Industry
When officials drafted Japan’s new national energy strategy last year, the development of storage batteries was seen as a longer-term process, more a 2050 than a 2030 issue. That view, however, was strongly upgraded this year, with more urgency and KPIs put on the sector.
METI’s Battery Industry Strategy is nothing if not a grand vision. With a focus on lithium-ion chemistry and all-solid-state technologies, the Strategy sees Japanese firms manufacturing more battery capacity by 2030 than is being installed globally today.
The Strategy details not only the capacity. It also estimates the investments required to set up the component and unit manufacturing, the money needed for the procurement of raw materials, and the scale of human resources that should be involved. The 30,000 people that METI says will be needed to operate the enlarged battery supply chain is only about 40% fewer than Japan’s entire nuclear power industry.
The challenges to delivering such a vision are equally grand. Among them, ironically, is the need to deliver on reducing the domestic price of electricity.
Strategy by numbers
With the spread of renewable energy and electric vehicles (EVs), Japan needs to secure a bigger storage battery manufacturing base. METI’s Storage Battery Industry Strategy promises that the government will take the lead in ensuring this happens rather than leaving investment in facilities and the upstream (raw materials) to the private sector.
The Strategy sets out several goals:
For comparison, the cumulative capacity of stationary Li-ion battery storage systems shipped in Japan was around 2.6 GWh in FY2019, rising to 3.5 GWh in FY2020, and about 4.4 GWh in FY2021.
Show me the money
Dreaming big is important, but METI understands that one reason Japanese battery makers lost market share to Chinese and South Korean rivals was due to scale. Chinese firms, in particular, quickly added capacity in the dominant liquid Li-on tech thanks to strong state support.
This time, the government is keen to share the investment burden, which it expects to be around ¥3.4 trillion, to expand the manufacturing base to 150 GWh. That number assumes the need for ¥1.3 trillion to build up the raw materials and components supply chain and ¥2.1 trillion for the manufacturing base.
Industry has not been shy to ask for greater state involvement. The Battery Supply Chain Council (BASC), a new industry group set up in April 2021, is asking the government to subsidize two-thirds of key investments. The group, which counts battery manufacturers, suppliers, and automakers among its more than 100 members, says that such a contribution is a must if Japan is to get to the same starting line as its top competitors.
Nowhere is state support more urgent than upstream. BASC says that the U.S. government contributed the bigger portion of investments that domestic firms made to secure lithium resources in South America and Australia. In Japan, public money accounts for just 10% of total funds.
To attempt a global production capacity of 600 GWh of batteries, Japanese firms would need to secure vast quantities of critical raw materials. The investment in nickel alone would be about ¥1.3 trillion (150,000 tons); for lithium – ¥680 billion (320,000 tons).
To get Japan to the same “starting line” as other nations, BASC says the state must invest ¥1.3 trillion over five years. The estimate for adding 450 GWh of capacity overseas is about ¥10.2 trillion.
Challenges
The government set target prices of ¥70,000/ kWh for residential energy storage systems and ¥60,000/ kWh for commercial/industrial energy storage systems by FY2030 as levels at which capital investments can be recovered through the revenue that these systems generate.
However, arguably the biggest challenge is creating a good environment for the battery industry to thrive. The sector is energy intensive and needs both low electricity prices and a thriving market for renewable energy in order to be sustainable. This makes the expansion of renewables in Japan a key factor in improving the industrial competitiveness of the domestic battery players.
Equally, the carbon footprint of battery manufacture will become an important competitive factor in the global market. For now, Japan’s power mix is still tilted towards fossil fuels.
Battery makers will need access to cheap land and green electricity that’s not only competitive on a domestic level but which can go head-to-head with industry peers abroad. While the cost of solar PV generation has dropped in the last decade, Japan’s levels remain close to double those in Europe.
Solutions to the above can be found in one of the 12 case studies selected by the government as part of a project to “support the introduction of grid storage batteries, as part of the accelerated rollout of renewable energy.” The companies behind the projects will test various business models for batteries, pooling revenues from the capacity market (kW value), the wholesale / spot market (kWh value), and the electricity balancing market (△kW value + kWh value).
The economics of battery manufacturing and storage battery use in Japan are still evolving, but at least now there’s a sense of urgency. This is a watershed moment for Japan to regain its global leadership in the sector.
Companies due to receive grants to introduce grid use storage batteries
| Company Name | Location |
| Pacifico Energy | HokkaidoFukuoka Prefecture (Kyushu) |
| ENEOS | Hokkaido |
| Eurus Energy Holdings | HokkaidoFukuoka Prefecture (Kyushu) |
| Hokkaido Electric | Hokkaido |
| J.I.G. Holdings Co. | Oita Prefecture (Kyushu) |
| Toho Gas Co. | Mie Prefecture (Kinki area) |
| Kansai Electric, ORIX | Wakayama Prefecture (Kinki area) |
| Global Engineering | Iwate Prefecture (Tohoku area) |
| Sumitomo Corporation | Hokkaido |
| NTT Anode Energy | Fukuoka Prefecture (Kyushu) |
| Kanden Energy Solutions | Miyagi Prefecture (Tohoku area) |
Source: Shin Energy Shinpo
BY ANDREW STATTER
Establishing an Image of Stability and Commitment to Attract Talent
Last week a report was published in the U.S. stating that 73% of new graduates ranked job stability as their top priority when choosing an employer. Among the leading factors for this are the current inflation and rising living costs, as well as the widespread belief that a recession is on the horizon.
People are not merely looking at whatever job might be on offer right now. Rather, they wish to see how their career will develop and grow internally over a 5 to 10 year timeframe.
In Japan, this prioritization of stability is nothing new. The country’s belief system still promotes the notion of lifetime employment. Also, social status is often linked to the prestige of your company’s name, much more than your job title or income.
To illustrate the importance of social status, some time ago one of our clients shared an interesting story. They were hiring a young, talented business developer from one of Japan’s most prestigious employers – a top-tier trading house. The new company offered the man a more senior position and a higher salary.
In the end, the young candidate accepted the offer. However, he did ask to delay the start date because he was due to wed soon. At the time of the ceremony, his family wanted to claim the boasting rights associated with employment at a top trading house.
For multinational companies hiring in Japan, understanding these cultural nuances is critical. In today’s volatile market, with a fast-changing energy landscape and global economic uncertainty, demonstrating a stability within your firm, and your brand’s commitment to the Japan market is paramount.
Let us dig into some specifics.
GK vs KK
A corporate entity in Japan can be set up as either a GK (Godo Gaisha) or KK (Kabushiki Kaisha). Both are limited liability companies and a suitable option to establish a local subsidiary. A GK is typically easier to set up with lower reporting requirements, has a cheaper registration and less requirements for shareholder meetings, reporting, and etc.
From a Japanese perspective though, a GK is seen as a lesser form of commitment. Having a KK in Japan is a clear demonstration of taking one’s business seriously and planning to be here for the long term.
Shared office vs own space
We can argue that Covid-19 has changed the landscape on this issue. However, traditionally an office in a shared space such as Regus or WeWork was seen as a temporary measure. Hence, an indication that a foreign business was only planning a temporary sojourn in Japan. Long-term office space, rental contracts and build outs are expensive here. However, making such investments is also seen as a statement of intent.
Attitude to local partnerships
Newer, less known names in the conservative energy industry can gain brand recognition by association. Secure a partnership with a Mitsubishi or Itochu, not to mention financing from a major Japanese bank, and your credibility will soar.
On the other hand, if you come to Japan demonstrating an attitude that your technology, business plan, track record, etc are superior to local options, or demand that you sell your tech without a local partnership, you’ll be met with high levels of doubt from potential employees. Building credibility will be an uphill battle.
Local hire vs expat leadership
This is the toughest! Japanese employees (and business partners) disdain those global firms that enter the market with an expatriate leader whose only mandate is to copy the blueprint of [insert country here] locally. Therefore, our firm often advocates choosing a Japanese person to be the country manager.
This demonstrates not only a commitment to Japan, but it’s also a clear sign of trust that the local talent pool can deliver, which in turn attracts more talent in the mid-lower levels. You can certainly hire a non-Japanese, or expatriate for this role. However, in that case, selecting someone who brings industry connections, and most importantly cultural understanding and sensitivity, can make or break your other talent attraction efforts.
Examples in the offshore wind industry:
Here are some examples that best illustrate the points made above.
Earlier this year, our firm helped one Japanese professional, a man in his mid 30s at a major oil and gas firm, to change career for the first time. He was interested in offshore wind, and so he met with a handful of companies. He received a lot of interest, but his final choice was not the biggest of the firms in contention. His new employer, however, had the following:
Another case was when a European energy giant entered the Japanese offshore wind market quite late, establishing an entity here well after the results of Round 1 auctions came out last December. Though this could be seen as a disadvantage, they made certain strategic decisions that made them a prospective employer of choice for many Japanese professionals:
Overall, Japan has always been seen as a long-term investment in terms of business development. The talent market is exactly the same. That’s why offering long term prospects in your firm will often help you acquire the best people.
Andrew Statter is Partner and Head of Greentech at Titan Consulting.
BY JOHN VAROLI
Below are some of last week’s most important international energy developments monitored by the Japan NRG team because of their potential to impact energy supply and demand, as well as prices. We see the following as relevant to Japanese and international energy investors.
Argentina/ Gas pipeline
Argentina secured $689 million from Brazil’s state bank, BNDES, to finance the second stage of a natural gas pipeline in the Vaca Muerta shale region. The first stage, which will link Vaca Muerta with the area near Buenos Aires, will be finished in June 2023.
China/ LNG tankers
Three Chinese shipyards won about 30% of this year’s record orders for 163 new gas carriers, boosting that nation’s market share in a sector usually dominated by South Korea.
Coal demand
Global coal consumption is set to rise to an all-time high this year, rising 1.2% and exceeding 8 billion tons; the previous record was set in 2013. In India, coal demand saw a 7% increase. In Germany coal-powered generation output rose 13.3% YoY.
ESG
Facing strong criticism over its climate change policies, HSBC will cut direct financing and advisory ties to new oil and gas fields and coal projects. However, the decision does not restrict financing of energy companies with plans to expand.
Germany/ Energy crisis
To keep the lights on, Berlin has spent an unplanned €440 billion on energy this year due to the Ukraine war and anti-Russian sanctions. That’s the cumulative total of government bailouts and efforts to prop up the country’s energy system, according to a Reuters report.
India/ Nuclear power
In addition to 11 reactors under construction, the govt approved building ten 700 MW pressurized heavy water reactors. Also approved were five sites for future NPPs. India’s current nuclear power capacity of 6.8 GW will increase to 22.5 GW by 2031.
India/ Renewable energy
In 2023, India might attract up to $10 billion investment in renewable energy, said Kaku Nakhate, Bank of America’s head for India. “People take us seriously. That’s why we’re seeing more sustainability funds that want to invest in India,” she said.
Norway/ Natural gas
Germany’s Wintershall Dea, along with Petoro and Sval Energi, will invest $800 million to develop the Dvalin North offshore gas field on the Norwegian shelf. Its ‘boe’ volume is estimated at 84 million, most of it natural gas.
Oil prices
Goldman Sachs slashed its oil price forecasts for 2023, expecting a market surplus. OPEC, however, disagrees and forecasts global oil demand rising by 2.25 million bpd in 2023, about 2.3%. OPEC cited the Chinese economy opening up as it relaxes its zero-COVID policy.
Russia/ Gas exports
President Vladimir Putin wants to increase gas supplies to Asia, particularly China. He also called to set prices for gas sales to the EU using an electronic platform “in the next few months… to determine the final price for our European consumers”.
Wind power
EU wind turbine makers will face a tough 2023 due to Chinese competition and higher production costs. Top EU manufacturers, including Siemens Gamesa, Vestas and Nordex, are running at a loss, with a return to profitability not expected soon.
U.S./ Shale oil
In January, oil output from the Permian shale basin is set to reach a record 5.6 million bpd, but the increase is a mere one-third of September’s rate. The rise will be about 37,000 bpd, the smallest gain in seven months, according to the EIA.
A selection of domestic and international events we believe will have an impact on Japanese energy
| January | OPEC quarterly meeting;JCCP Petroleum Conference – Tokyo;
EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act activates; Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) Trade Agreement that includes ASEAN countries, China and Japan activates; Indonesia to temporarily ban coal exports for one month; Regional bloc developments: Cambodia assumes presidency of ASEAN; Thailand assumes presidency of APEC; Germany assumes presidency of G7; France assumes presidency of EU; Indonesia assumes presidency of G20; and Senegal assumes presidency of African Union; Japan-U.S. two-plus-two meeting; Japan’s parliament convenes on Jan. 17 for 150 days; Prime Minister Kishida visits Australia (tentative) |
| February | Chinese New Year (Jan. 31 to Feb. 6);Beijing Winter Olympics;
South Korea joins RCEP trade agreement |
| March | Renewable Energy Institute annual conference;Smart Energy Week – Tokyo;
Japan Atomic Industrial Forum annual conference – Tokyo; World Hydrogen Summit – Netherlands; EU New strategy on international energy engagement published; End of 2021/22 Japanese Fiscal Year; South Korean presidential election |
| April | Japan Energy Summit – Tokyo;MARPOL Convention on Emissions reductions for containerships and LNG carriers activates;
Japan Feed-in-Premium system commences as Energy Resilience Act takes effect; Launch of Prime Section of Japan Stock Exchange with TFCD climate reporting requirement; Convention on Biological Diversity Conference for post-2020 biodiversity framework – China; Elections: French presidential election; Hungarian general election |
| May | World Natural Gas Conference WCG2022 – South Korea;Elections: Australian general election; Philippines general and presidential elections |
| June | Happo-Noshiro offshore wind project auction closes;Annual IEA Global Conference on Energy Efficiency – Denmark;
UNEP Environment Day, Environment Ministers Meeting – Sweden; G7 meeting – Germany |
| July | Japan to finalize economic security policies as part of natl. security strategy review;China connects to grid 2nd 200 MW SMR at Shidao Bay Nuclear Plant, Shandong;
Czech Republic assumes presidency of EU; Elections: Japan’s Upper House Elections; Indian presidential election |
| August | Japan: Africa (TICAD 8) Summit – Tunisia;Kenyan general election |
| September | IPCC to release Assessment and Synthesis Report;Clean Energy Ministerial and the Mission Innovation Summit – Pittsburg, U.S.;
Japan LNG Producer/Consumer Conference – Tokyo; IMF/World Bank annual meetings – Washington; Annual UN General Assembly meetings; METI to set safety standards for ammonia and hydrogen-fired power plants; End of 1H FY2022 Fiscal Year in Japan; Swedish general election |
| October | EU Review of CO2 emission standards for heavy-duty vehicles published;Chinese Communist Party 20th quinquennial National Party Congress;
G20 Meeting – Bali, Indonesia; Innovation for Cool Earth TCFD & Annual Forums – Tokyo; Elections: Okinawa gubernational election; Brazilian presidential election; |
| November | COP27 – Egypt;U.S. mid-term elections;
Soccer World Cup – Qatar; |
| December | Germany to eliminate nuclear power from energy mix;Happo-Noshiro offshore wind project auction result released;
Japan submits revised 2030 CO2 reduction goal following Glasgow’s COP26; Japan-Canada Annual Energy Forum (tentative); Tesla expected to achieve 1.3 million EV deliveries for full year 2022 |
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NEWS
・METI sets 2028 target to introduce carbon surcharge as part of a widescale revamp to tax oil and other fossil fuel companies
・Wind developers concerned about shortage of EU turbines as big projects in Europe tie up resources of local manufacturers
・Govt plans to expand carbon credits mechanism to private sector; Joint Crediting Mechanism (JCM) to be the basic framework