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ANALYSIS
JAPAN AT COP26:
KEY FOCUS POINTS AND EXPECTATIONS
The Japanese delegation at this week’s UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Scotland will have three main focuses: Coal; How to value and trade carbon; and, Rules for measuring emissions. Some members of the delegation expect the climate talks to be tense and stretch beyond COP26’s Nov. 12 closing date. Nevertheless, they feel there’s broad consensus among the nearly 200 participating countries on certain topics, especially the need to kickstart an international market mechanism for carbon credits.
JAPAN’S 2030 ENERGY PLAN FOR LNG WILL HAVE SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ON GLOBAL LNG MARKET
By approving the sixth iteration of the Basic Energy Plan, Japan has cemented its medium to long-term policy shift away from coal and gas (LNG) in power generation in favor of renewables. That strategy will likely have a major impact not only on Japan’s purchases but also on the global LNG industry as a significant part of global supply may need to look for a new home.
Japanese officials counter that the nation will continue to be a major buyer, envisioning that the nation’s companies will become top LNG suppliers to developing Asian economies. But managing order flow based on multiple national dynamics will be a new challenge for Japanese LNG buyers.
GLOBAL VIEW
Australian researchers patent bricks that can store energy for 30 years. France to announce plans for six new nuclear reactors. Tidal energy could meet 10% of UK’s power demand. BMW to start buying “green” steel in 2025. Investor demands that Shell splits off oil assets. Details on this and more in the global wrap.
WEATHER OUTLOOK
A warmer than usual November is on the cards.
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K. K. Yuri Group
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Editorial Team
Yuriy Humber (Editor-in-Chief)
Tom O’Sullivan (Japan, Middle East, Africa)
John Varoli (Americas)
Regular Contributors
Mayumi Watanabe (Japan)
Daniel Shulman (Japan)
Takehiro Masutomo (Japan)
Art & Design
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OFTEN USED ACRONYMS
METI The Ministry of Energy, Trade and Industry
MOE Ministry of Environment
ANRE Agency for Natural Resources and Energy
NEDO New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization
TEPCO Tokyo Electric Power Company
KEPCO Kansai Electric Power Company
EPCO Electric Power Company
JCC Japan Crude Cocktail
JKM Japan Korea Market, the Platt’s LNG benchmark
CCUS Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage
mmbtu Million British Thermal Units
mb/d Million barrels per day
mtoe Million Tons of Oil Equivalent
kWh Kilowatt hours (electricity generation volume)
Government requests ¥1.8 trillion sustainability budget for fiscal 2022
(Japan NRG, Oct. 22)
Breakdown of the sustainability budget request, FY2022

Breakdown by ministry

Japan to expand fuel stockpile guidelines to oil and coal
(Japan NRG, Oct. 26)
METI minister asks UAE energy minister to raise oil output
(Japan NRG, Oct. 26)
Opposition parties skip voicing anti-nuclear views ahead of general election
(Mainichi Shimbun, Oct. 25)
PM Kishida’s energy vision revealed; focus is on batteries and consumers
(Diamond, Oct. 28)
Japan elaborates support programs to ASEAN ahead of COP26
(Japan NRG, Oct. 27)
Government investing in science to suppress cattle burps
(Jiji, Oct. 24)
Green Innovation Fund WG releases concept of green connected cars
(Japan NRG, Oct. 26)
Solar group gives qualified praise for Basic Energy Plan
(New Energy Business News, Oct. 29)
NEDO invests ¥32 billion into hydrogen/ammonia powered ships
(New Energy Business News, Oct. 27)
Tokyo bids to remake itself as global hub for green, sustainable finance
(Asia Nikkei, Oct. 25)
TEPCO to receive ¥12.3 trillion grants for Fukushima compensation
(Japan NRG, Oct. 26)
Aircon major Daikin bets on next-generation cooling tech to improve EVs
(Asia Nikkei, Oct. 27)
Oji Paper sets sights on carbon neutrality
(Nikkei, Oct. 28)
Mitsui & Co partners with US carbon solutions firm on CCUS
(Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun, Oct. 29)
BASF starts using NGK storage battery
(Kankyo Business, Oct. 22)
Ford, Denso back standardized metric for EV battery health
(Kankyo Business, Oct. 22)
One-Dot News:
TWO-WEEK TEMPERATURE FORECASTS (OCT. 29 ~ NOV. 10)
Nation-wide

Tokyo area

ONE-MONTH SEASONAL FORECAST (OCT. 30~ NOV. 29)


| No. of operable nuclear reactors | 33 | Electricity Price | Friday, Oct. 29 | % Change WoW | ||
| Of which | restarted | 10 | JEPX 24-Hour Spot | ¥13.54/ kWh | -12.9% | |
| in operation today | 7 | TOCOM Nov. baseload (Tokyo area) | ¥19.50/ kWh | -3.1% | ||
Source: Company websites, JANSI and JAIF, as of Oct 31, 2021
Seven of 10 major power utilities cut profit forecasts; TEPCO sees first loss in nine years
(Nikkei, Oct. 29)
Market share of new power retailers breaks 20% level for first time
(Japan NRG, Oct. 28)
LEGEND:
Red: Total electricity sales;
Blue: Special High-Voltage;
Yellow: High-Voltage;
Green: Low-Voltage.

Renewable operators ask govt. to keep tariffs fixed for several more years
(Japan NRG, Oct. 29)
METI says cold snap will mean tight electricity supply
(Asahi Shimbun, Oct. 27)
Chubu Electric, partners to build one of Japan’s biggest biomass power plants
(New Energy Business News, Oct. 28)
IEA says cost of solar-generated electricity to fall below ¥2/ kWh
(Nikkei XTech, Oct. 25)
Osaka Gas and Sky Solar Japan to collaborate on solar
(PR Times, Oct. 27)
Hokkaido Electric partners with Mitsubishi on hydro
(Denki Shimbun, Oct. 29)
J Power and SymEnergy start work on Hokkaido wind farm
(Denki Shimbun, Oct. 25)
Marubeni to build cogeneration plant in Saudi Arabia
(Kankyo Business, Oct. 26)
NUCLEAR REACTOR NEWS ROUND-UP:
Japan Oil Price: $73.81/ barrel

Japan (JLC) LNG Price: $9.90/ mmbtu

Number of firms using “carbon neutral” gas in Japan jumps to 78
(Gas Energy News, Oct. 25)
Japan’s trading houses swap coal for gas, target CCUS
(Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun, Oct. 27)
INPEX joins Idemitsu in Norway oil project as Osaka Gas exits
(Company statements, various, Oct. 28)
BY MAYUMI WATANABE
Japan at COP26:
Adapting to Great Expectations
The Japanese delegation at this week’s UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Scotland will have three main focuses: Coal; How to value and trade carbon; and, Rules for measuring emissions.
Some members of the delegation expect the climate talks to be tense and stretch beyond COP26’s Nov. 12 closing date. Nevertheless, they feel there’s broad consensus among the nearly 200 participating countries on certain topics, especially the need to kickstart an international market mechanism for carbon credits.
In recent years an international climate event would have filled Japanese negotiators with dread. The country was routinely slammed for supporting coal-fired generation, with one environmental NGO twice crowning Japan with its satirical “Fossil of the Day” award. Previous Environment Minister Koizumi even claimed such criticism was a catalyst for the country’s net-zero emissions pledge.
A year on from Japan’s commitment, however, and attitudes towards coal power plants are shifting. The G7 recently narrowed its criticism of coal to “unabated” thermal stations, while touting the potential of carbon capture and co-firing systems. There’s also a growing interest globally in some form of carbon credits both to offset the CO2 that cannot be avoided and to encourage efforts that does avoid it.
For Japan, the position change on coal and greater global interest in international mechanism for carbon credit offer hope of solutions that can act in concert with a turn to renewable energy. While Japan has committed to doubling the ratio of renewables in its power mix by 2030, that move alone wouldn’t curb emissions by the amount specified in its NDC pledge.
Equally important for Japan will be to direct the global conversation during COP26 towards how to measure CO2 and other greenhouse gases at the local, corporate and national level. At stake is Japan’s ability to carry out decarbonization not only at home but also to lead the effort across Asia.
Changing attitudes to coal
International criticism of Japan’s coal use finally pushed METI to announce in July 2020 that it would look to scrap all “inefficient” coal-fired power plants by 2030. At the time, local media reported that as many as 114 out of 140 coal power units in the country would be scrapped.
After a year of debates around what constitutes “inefficient,” Japan finds itself in a somewhat more amenable policy environment. The 2018 Paris Rulebook was somewhat ambiguous on coal but in May the G7 Environment and Climate Ministers Meeting clarified the extent of the push against coal. The G7 communiqué noted that aid will be stopped only for new coal plants that are “unabated” (i.e., there is no effort made to curb their emissions), while leaving the possibility of building new plants that have carbon capture systems and allow for co-firing of coal and either biomass, hydrogen or ammonia.
This idea that only unabated coal-fired plants should be eliminated is backed by the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Of course, criticism of Japan’s coal policy has not stopped completely. Only this month, Gonzalo Munoz, the UN High-Level Climate Champion, spoke at the Japan Climate Initiative Online Conference to call for an entire phase-out of coal-fired generation by 2030. On a practical level, however, it’s known that both Japanese industry and the government don’t see this as feasible and they’ll never agree to it at COP26.
In fact, Japan’s negotiators feel the country can stand taller at this week’s event in Glasgow. The country has “caught up” with the global environmental agenda over the last year, said Tamura Kentaro, director of the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES). Japan’s broader COP26 negotiation team includes staff from IGES.
Out of the 197 jurisdictions attending COP26, only 59 have declared carbon neutrality by 2050-2060 as a goal. Japan is among them, but even more significant, the country is one of eight jurisdictions to have written the goal into law, and is one of only a dozen or so to have increased the size of its emissions reduction program as per the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC).
Japan’s Oct. 22 NDC filing said that in FY2030 emissions will drop by 46% (and maybe as much as 50%) from FY2013 levels. The previous NDC from 2016 aimed for a 26% reduction.


How to cut CO2?
Given that Japan still expects to rely on coal for 19% of its power at the end of the decade, down from twice that currently, critics have questioned how emissions would drop by so much.
IGES explains that this is possible if Japan’s industries change their mindset from only thinking about energy efficiency to including the ideas around energy transition. According to IGES, Japan needs to double the speed of its energy transition by replacing fossil fuel energy with renewables at a pace of 2% per year. So far, it has only been 1.2%/ year at most. IGES calculations for meeting the 46% emissions reduction factor in economic growth of 1.3%/ year and energy efficiency improvements of 1.5%/ year. As far as renewables-for-fossil fuels replacement, Japan should be able to slash 3.5% of its emissions on an annual basis, according to IGES.
The transition will come in stages and is unlikely to be linear, but it should unfold as follows:
The gradual approach is also gaining support across many countries as concerns about energy shortages and over-reliance on other fuels such as natural gas grow on the back of recent price spikes in energy commodities around the world.
Coal power dependency, 2020)
| Japan | 29% | France | 1% |
| US | 19% | Italy | 5% |
| Germany | 24% | Canada | 7% |
| UK | 2% | Australia | 54% |
Source: IGES
Article 6 of the Paris Rulebook
Japan has always favored a market-driven approach to climate change, claiming that regulatory pressures will discourage innovation. As a host of the Kyoto Protocol that founded the CDM scheme, it engaged with developing countries for emission-reduction projects, generating offset credits that Japan could claim against its own CO2 total.
Since 2013, Japan has carried out 203 projects in 17 countries, earning offset credits for 2.2 million tons of carbon.
By 2030, Japan needs to cut approximately 452 million tons of carbon from its total. Of that, 352 million tons will be from the energy transition and better energy efficiency, while another 100 million tons will come through offsets, according to Japan’s NDC document.
The successful launch of an international credit trading mechanism is essential for Japan to achieve its NDC goals, according to IGES.
International consensus, however, is still lacking on how to manage the proceeds from credit trades; on the accounting rules needed to avoid double-counting; and around credits earned from the Clean Development Mechanism programs.
Climate speaks for itself
Japan may be feeling less of a target at COP26 than it has in the past, but pressure will not stop with the summit. December 2022 is the deadline for the first progress report on the updated NDCs. In 2023, Japan will also host the G7 summit, with climate issues high on the agenda.
Behind the scenes, METI and state-backed JOGMEC are soliciting utilities, energy companies and trading houses to honor the IEA roadmap, to shift to LNG-powered stations instead of coal, and to deploy either co-firing or CCUS technologies at “unabated” coal power plants.
Once the amended Japanese climate law takes effect in April 2022, the Environment Ministry will start requesting municipalities to create “renewable energy promotion zones”, as well as zones that cannot host any power stations, to make sure the decarbonization agenda takes root at local level.
In a way, such regulatory strong-arming of industry and municipalities is a change of approach for Japan, which had mostly relied on market mechanisms and voluntary contributions to tackle climate change.
One reason for the tactical change could be the warning signs from the climate itself. Japan’s air temperature has risen 1.2 degrees Celsius in the last 100 years, more than the global average increase of 0.8 degrees, according to the Japan Meteorological Research Institute. Sea temperatures are up 1.16 degrees locally compared with a global 0.5-degree bump.
As a result, Japanese sea levels are up 10 centimeters in the last century and hot and cold extreme swings in temperature are on the rise. Meteorologists point to stronger winds and heavier precipitations, and as a result more frequent natural disasters that have destroyed infrastructure, including solar farms and other renewable facilities.
Higher sea temperatures are also changing Japan’s fishing catch and, in turn, the local food chain. Rather than COP26, the climate itself will ultimately determine if Japan’s actions are sufficiently sustainable.
BY ANDY FLOWER
INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT
FLOWER LNG
METI’s Ambitious Outlook for Power Generation in Japan:
How Will it Impact the Global LNG Market?
By approving the sixth iteration of the Basic Energy Plan on Oct. 22, Japan has cemented its medium to long-term policy shift away from coal and gas in power generation in favor of renewables. That strategy will likely cause a major impact not only on Japan’s purchases but also on the global LNG industry as a significant part of global LNG supply may need to look for a new home.
The new Plan charts a trajectory for LNG’s share of the power mix to fall from 37% in 2019 to 20% in 2030. Based on 2019 import numbers and government data, that would free up a volume that’s equivalent to 6.6% of global imports, or close to India’s total imports in that year.
If Japanese power and city gas consumption remains around the 2019 level, then the country’s LNG imports would drop to around 50 million tons in 2030, just under 10% of the forecasted global demand. The ratio was at 22% in 2019.
So far, Japanese officials in charge of oil and gas say that rather than curtailing purchases on the global market, the nation’s companies will buy more cargoes come the end of the decade. Such confidence suggests Japan sees LNG playing a major role in Southeast Asia’s energy developments over the course of the decade. Perhaps it also shows a belief that natural gas will remain relevant well into the future.
Background
The 6th Basic Energy Plan makes some significant changes to the targets in the previous plan, which was released in 2016 and approved by the Cabinet in July 2018. METI describes the update as an “ambitious outlook” for energy supply in 2030 on a pathway to achieving the government’s announced target of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. It is certainly an ambitious outlook for the electricity generation sector, which is one of Japan’s main sources of green-house gas emissions since the Fukushima disaster, when subsequently power from nuclear reactors was mostly replaced with thermal capacity.
The new 2030 Plan targets a reduction in GHG emissions of 46% compared with a baseline of 2013, which is a major upgrade on the previously cited 26% reduction. This is to be achieved largely through increasing the share of carbon free sources of power (renewables, nuclear and, to a minor extent, hydrogen and ammonia) from 24% in 2019 to between 57% and 71% in 2030 at the expense of fossil-fuels, where a decline from 76% in 2019 to 41% in 2030 is targeted.
Nuclear’s share remains unchanged from the 2016 Plan despite continued opposition from the public and the technical, safety and security problems that power utilities have faced in restarting most of the 33 potentially operable nuclear plants.
The more than doubling of renewables, currently 40% of which is from hydro, is similarly challenging, given the difficulty of finding suitable locations for solar power and onshore and offshore wind turbines.
LNG is the fossil fuel facing the largest reduction in its share of the power mix, with a decline from the actual 37% in 2019 (and the envisaged 27% according to the previous plan) to 20% in the new plan.
Looking at what that means in terms of import numbers, in 2019, Japan brought in 77.23 million tons (mt) of LNG, according to official figures. Of that, 50.63 mt was ordered by the power utilities.
If LNG had met 20% of electricity demand in 2019 rather than the actual 37%, the power companies would have imported 27.3 mt, or 23.3 mt less. That’s equivalent to 6.6% of global imports.
METI Targets for Shares of Fuels in Power Generation in 2030
| Source | Actual 2019 | 2030 | |
| Current Target | Ambitious Outlook | ||
| Renewables | 18% | 22%-24% | 36% – 38% |
| Hydrogen/Ammonia | 0% | 0% | 1% |
| Nuclear | 6% | 20%-22% | 20% – 22% |
| LNG | 37% | 27% | 20% |
| Coal | 32% | 26% | 19% |
| Oil | 7% | 3% | 2% |
| Reduction in GHG Emissions | 14% | 26% | 46% |
Japan’s LNG pedigree
Japan has been the world’s largest and most influential LNG player over the last 50 years. It started importing LNG from Alaska in 1969. By the mid-70s, it was the world’s largest importer, and by the mid-80s Japan accounted for 75% of global LNG imports.
Most of the LNG projects in the Pacific basin were launched with Japan as the main market and, in the Middle East both ADNOC LNG and Qatargas phase 1 were developed to supply the growing Japanese market.
The traditional Japan Crude Cocktail (JCC) indexed LNG price formula was negotiated by Japanese buyers and was adopted by other buyers in Asia. Many LNG developers have targeted contracts with Japanese buyers because they are reliable, experienced and creditworthy partners, which supported the raising of project finance and put them in a position to take a final investment decision (FID).
This year, however, Japan’s hegemony was challenged. China became the largest LNG importer having taken delivery of around 2 mt more than Japan in the first nine months of the year. The gap will further widen rapidly as Chinese appetite for LNG grows while Japan’s domestic demand stagnates along the lines of the new energy plan.
Japanese buyers have been largely absent from the market for new supply in the last two years, signing no new long-term contracts in 2020 and committing to only around 1.5 million tons per annum (mtpa) in 2019. Long-term contracts with ADNOC LNG and Malaysia LNG have been renewed in reduced volumes, and negotiations over the extension of the 6 mtpa of contracts with Qatargas, which expire at the end of 2021, have not yet been concluded. The outcome, at best, will probably be a reduction of the volumes. But it’s possible that some of the contracts will be allowed to expire.
As a result, Japan will likely become a price follower in the Asian market rather than being a price setter. Japanese officials have often urged LNG producers to accept pricing based on the country’s demand-supply dynamics, but with a 10% global market share it will be that much harder for the country to use its market conditions as benchmarks for the wider Asia market.
What’s more, even METI’s own calculations indicate that as existing gas fields around the world are depleted, from 2028 there will be more tightness in the market unless new projects get the green light. That will make procurement even harder and if Japanese firms are not some of the key investors in the new projects, their volume demands will slip down the pecking order.
Future outlook
The upside for LNG demand in Japan could come from nuclear and renewables failing to reach the ambitious targets in the new plan. That would put pressure on Japan to make sure that what it uses to generate power is as low in emissions as possible, favoring regasified LNG over coal.
In that sense, recent comments by Hosaka Shin, Commissioner of ANRE (Agency for Natural Resources and Energy, part of METI) has probably given producers some hope that there is upside to imports beyond the decline envisaged in the targets for power generation.
“LNG is an essential balancing fuel to achieve carbon neutrality even as the country leans more on renewables,” Hosaka said at the METI-hosted annual Producer-Consumer conference on October 5. “Natural gas/LNG as the source material for hydrogen and ammonia will remain important even beyond carbon neutrality in 2050.”
Furthermore, Hosaka’s statement that “the goal remains for Japanese companies to be buying 100 million tons of LNG year by 2030 to meet domestic and overseas demand” suggests that Japan’s LNG buyers will have a wider role in the Asian market than just securing LNG supply to meet demand in Japan.
Japan clearly hopes to retain its influence on LNG pricing and contracts as the fuel remains a significant part of its own energy mix and as a basis for infrastructure exports. Managing that influence while being in control of the demand for only half of its import volumes (i.e., the domestic market) will prove a new challenge for Japan, albeit one which opens new opportunities.
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.
Australia/ Renewable energy
AC Energy Corporation (ACEN) obtained board approval to increase ownership in UPC\AC Renewables Australia to 100%, giving the company full control over a pipeline of renewable energy projects that includes Australia’s largest solar farm. The $243 million acquisition needs regulatory approval, which if given, would be ACEN’s first wholly-owned development and operations platform outside of its home in the Philippines.
Battery storage/ breakthrough
Engineers at University of Newcastle in Australia have patented a material that stores thermal energy in a block that weighs about 6 kilos. The bricks are known as Miscibility Gap Alloys (MGAs), and are made from aluminum and graphite. Each block can store about 1 kWh of energy generated from renewable sources, and is said to be functional and durable for about 30 years.
“Green” steel/ BMW
Starting in 2025, BMW Group will purchase steel from Swedish startup H2 Green Steel for its factories in Europe. The German automaker’s goal is to reduce CO2 emissions in its steel supply chain by about 2 million tons by 2030. H2 Green Steel uses hydrogen and clean energy to make steel; mass production begins in 2024. The production of ‘green steel’ has about 95% less GHG emissions than steel made using coal.
Climate finance/ investment fund
Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and former Goldman Sachs executive David Blood have launched a new management firm, named Just Climate, to finance net-zero carbon projects. The firm has financial backing from Microsoft and Ireland’s sovereign wealth fund, and will invest in solutions to help limit increases in global temperatures. This isn’t the duo’s first environmental financial venture. In 2004, Gore and Blood set up Generation Investment Management.
ESG/ Royal Dutch Shell
Activist hedge fund Third Point, led by billionaire Daniel Loeb, has accused Royal Dutch Shell of having an “incoherent” strategy on how to decarbonize operations and transition to clean energy. Loeb is urging the company to split itself into “multiple standalone companies”, including one that’s focused on oil and gas. Third Point is reported to have an estimated $750 million stake in Shell, which itself has an approximate $190 billion market cap.
France/ Nuclear
In a report on how to meet future electricity demand, France’s grid operator, RTE, said next-gen nuclear reactors can play a crucial role in transitioning the country’s energy sector away from fossil fuels. “Building new nuclear reactors is economically viable… and it’s possible to maintain a fleet of around 40 GW in 2050,” said the RTE report. It’s expected that by year’s end President Macron will announce the construction of six new EPR nuclear reactors.
Indonesia/ Coal
Thanks to surging Chinese power demand, Indonesia is enjoying record coal prices that have soared to $150 per ton, up from about $90 per ton in early June. Southeast Asia’s biggest economy is now China’s leading overseas supplier of coal, with imports hitting a record of more than 21 million tons in September, up from 17 million tons in August. Last year, China banned Australian coal and instead agreed to buy $1.5 billion of coal from Indonesia this year.
UK/ Tidal energy
The £1.7 billion Blue Eden tidal lagoon project in Swansea will have modern underwater turbines with a capacity of 320 MW, as well as floating solar power. A battery facility will store the renewable energy and power the entire site. Construction starts in early 2023. Blue Eden will be the world’s largest facility of its kind when fully operational by 2032. The Tidal Range Alliance says that tidal power generation could supply 5% to 10% of the UK’s energy needs.
U.S./ Offshore wind
Spain’s wind turbine giant, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, and Dominion Energy will invest $200 million to build a blade factory in the State of Virginia. The blades will be used to build the offshore Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project (CVOW). Expected to be finished in 2025, the 32-hectare CVOW will have 180 turbines, each 245 meters in height, and will generate 2.6 GW. It will be the largest offshore wind farm in the U.S.
U.S./ Wind
Enel Green Power North America, a leading developer, owner and operator of renewable energy plants, has started building the 25 Mile Creek wind farm in the State of Oklahoma. The 250 MW facility consists of 60 turbines that will be operational in late 2022. This is Enel Green’s twelfth wind farm in Oklahoma, where it has a wind portfolio worth more than $3 billion. Across the U.S., the company has over 2.5 GW of new wind and solar capacity under construction.
A selection of domestic and international events we believe will have an impact on Japanese energy.
| February | Approval of Fiscal 2021 Budget by Japanese parliament including energy funding projects;
CMC LNG Conference |
| March | 10th Anniversary of Fukushima Nuclear Accident;
Smart Energy Week – Tokyo; Quarterly OPEC Meeting; Japan LPG Annual Conference; Full completion of all aspects of the multi-year deregulation of Japan’s electricity market; End of 2020/21 Fiscal Year in Japan; |
| April | Japan Atomic Industrial Forum – Annual Nuclear Power Conference;
38th ASEAN Annual Conference-Brunei; Japan LNG & Gas Virtual Summit (DMG)-Tokyo Three crucial by-elections in Hokkaido, Nagano & Hiroshima – April 25th |
| May | Bids close in first tender for commercial offshore wind projects in Japan;
Prime Minister Suga to visit the U.S. |
| June | Release of New Japan National Basic Energy Plan-2021;
G7 Meeting – U.K. Presidents Biden and Putin are due to meet at a summit in Geneva Forum for China-Africa Cooperation Summit (Senegal) |
| July | Tokyo Metropolitan Govt. Assembly Elections;
Commencement of 2020 Tokyo Olympics |
| August | METI committee approves draft of Japan’s 6th Basic Energy Plan |
| September | Ruling LDP Presidential Election;
UN General Assembly Annual Meeting that is expected to address energy/climate challenges; IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings (multilateral and central banks expected to take further action on emissions disclosures and lending to fossil fuel projects); End of H1 FY2021 Fiscal Year in Japan; Japan-Russia: Eastern Economic Forum (Vladivostok)-tentative |
| October | Japan’s 2021 General Election; Hydrogen Ministerial Conference in conjunction with IEA METI Sponsored LNG Producer/Consumer Conference; Innovation for Cool Earth Forum – Tokyo Conference; Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosure (TCFD) – Tokyo Conference; G20 Meeting-Italy |
| November | COP26 (Glasgow);
Asian Development Bank (‘ADB’) Annual Conference; Japan-Canada Energy Forum; East Asia Summit (EAS) – Brunei |
| December | Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Forum – New Zealand;
Final details expected from METI on proposed unbundling of natural gas pipeline network scheduled for 2022. |
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NEWS
・Govt. wants ¥1.8 trillion ($15.8 bn) budget for sustainability works next fiscal year; environmental protection makes up 39% of total
・Seven of 10 major power utilities cut profit forecasts; TEPCO sees first loss in nine years on rising coal, gas and oil prices
・Market share of new power retailers breaks 20% level; challengers to the major power utilities now control over 30% of Tokyo market