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ENERGY TRANSITION & POLICY
ELECTRICITY MARKETS
OIL, GAS & MINING
ANALYSIS
GAS MARKETS IN TURMOIL MEANS
SECOND THOUGHTS OVER “CARBON-NEUTRAL” LNG
As the war in Ukraine further pounds natural gas markets already facing upheaval and soaring prices, major industry players now have to grapple with a wide array of issues in order to bring order and calm to the sector. One of those issues in Japan is the future of “carbon-neutral” LNG, a product that offers both the molecules and credits that claim to offset the emissions from the fuel. After taking off a year ago with sales to Tokyo Gas, the niche sector has quickly expanded to involve over 40 gas utilities in Japan. That momentum is now slowing and the war is only one reason.
JAPAN ACCELERATES GEOTHERMAL CAPACITY AT HOME AND ABROAD, BUT PROJECT SIZE FRUSTRATES
The government has recently drawn a clearer blueprint for geothermal, the country’s promising yet largely untapped renewable energy source. The end goal is to drive private companies to expand business at home and abroad. With the right policies and state support, Japan has the potential to become a global leader in geothermal. Since the Fukushima disaster, the number of geothermal facilities has quadrupled to over 90, but many sites are mini-sized. The ambition is to triple the capacity over this decade, but even if Japan reached that target, that is only the beginning for the sector.
GLOBAL VIEW
Top western energy companies announce exit from Russia projects and investments. Saudi Arabia to develop world’s largest off-grid battery storage site. India accelerated solar rollout last year. AIG to stop insuring firms with significant coal or oil sands revenue. Details on these and more in our global wrap.
EVENT CALENDAR FOR 2022
Key political and business events in Japan and abroad.
PUBLISHER
K. K. Yuri Group
Events
Editorial Team
Yuriy Humber (Editor-in-Chief)
John Varoli (Senior Editor, Americas)
Mayumi Watanabe (Japan)
Wilfried Goossens (Japan, Events)
Regular Contributors
Chisaki Watanabe (Japan)
Daniel Shulman (Japan)
Takehiro Masutomo (Japan)
Art & Design
22 Graphics Inc.
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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)

Cabinet approves five key energy act amendments to meet net-carbon goals
(Japan NRG, March 1)
|
Energy Conservation Act |
|
Enforces energy conservation to end-users, large and small; changes the energy demand structure |
| ||
| ||
|
Acts to Promote Non-Fossil Energy and Sophisticated Supply Structure |
|
Power retailers to mix CCS, hydrogen, ammonia-fired power to their services |
| ||
|
Japan Oil, Gas and Metals Corporation Act |
Scope of JOGMEC activities will be expanded to: |
JOGMEC roles in securing energy and. |
|
critical metal resources are expanded | |
| ||
|
Rare metal refineries in Japan are nickel, cobalt and lithium hydroxide. | |
| ||
|
Mining Act |
|
Japan plans to launch rare earth mining to break away from Chinese supplies |
|
Electricity Business Act |
|
Slows dismantling of thermal power plants to secure energy during winter and summer demand seasons; while storage batteries could improve energy balance |
| ||
|
TAKEAWAY: The move is a major change for METI, which previously drove energy transition through voluntarism and “co-regulation”, rather than laws. Some are likely to call for incentives to push stronger requirements on businesses. According to Australia’s Lynas, the largest rare earth producer outside of China, 1 million units of EVs requires 600 tons of neodymium and praseodymium, and 1 GW of offshore wind turbines need 300 tons of neodymium praseodymium oxide. Japan imported 8,475 tons of rare earths in 2021: 4,778 tons from China, and 3,073 tons from Vietnam.
METI advisors stress the importance of nuclear power for energy security
(Japan NRG, March 1)
TAKEAWAY: Nuclear ambitions are growing in other countries, including those that do not currently have the technology, such as the Philippines and Singapore. Small modular reactors (SMR), said to be safer than the current reactors, are driving this interest. The U.S. Nuclear Energy Institute forecasts half of global nuclear capacity will be in Asia and Oceania in 2050, increasing three-fold from today.
Japan’s nuclear component exports slumped to ¥21.4 billion in 2020, from ¥131.4 billion in 2010. China and Russia jointly have a 60% share of pressurized water reactors under construction and 55% share of new PWR projects. METI aims for Japan’s resurgence in SMR, high temperature gas reactor, and fast-neutron reactor markets.
Coal-ammonia co-firing potential seen at 25.5 GW for 2050
(Japan NRG, Feb. 25)
Government eyes unused rail land for solar generation
(Mainichi Shimbun, March 2)
IHI to develop electric propulsion system for ships
(Japan Maritime Daily, March 4)
Sony and Honda tie up to develop electric vehicles, aiming for release in 2025
(Company statements, March 4)
Mitsubishi Chemical to produce carbon-negative alternative to wood and plastic
(Kankyo Business, Feb. 25)
Events now able to purchase certificates to show they source green electricity
(Kankyo Business, March 2)
One-Dot Wrap:

Solar cell maker raises prices by 20% based on rising raw material costs
(Kankyo Business, March 3)
TAKEAWAY: The cost of solar panels has fallen continuously for years, but all signs indicate this trend is now played out or about to take a multi-year pause. The price of raw materials for clean energy products has been rising quickly and is now accelerating. This is in part due to the higher fossil fuel prices that feed into industrial power generation and transport costs.
New law requires generators to notify authorities before shutting down power stations
(NHK, March 1)
Kansai Electric shuts one nuclear reactor for maintenance from March 1
(Company statement, Feb. 25)
Akita offshore wind: industry scrambles to get a piece of the action
(Nikkei, March 3)
Eurus Energy submits plans to develop 600 MW offshore wind plant
(New Energy Business News, March 1)
Okinawa firms seeks to build 164 MW solar project in Fukushima region
(New Energy Business News, March 4)
Sumitomo, Shikoku Electric tie up with Singapore firm to build Japan solar farms
(New Energy Business News, March 3)
Kansai Electric joins 1.9 GW offshore wind development in Europe
(Kankyo Business, March 1)
Vena Energy secures ¥10.7 billion green loan for two solar projects
(Kankyo Business, Feb. 25)
Outgoing NRA head endorses his replacement
(NHK, March 2)
TEPCO stock at one year high on LNG news
(Morningstar, March 4)

War in Ukraine and rising energy prices:
TAKEAWAY: Western media believe Japanese firms should quit Russian oil and gas projects in line with overseas peers. While the PM initially suggested this may happen based on a private business decision, his comment was disingenuous. When he spoke directly to the press, his comments toned down and didn’t promise a quick resolution.
Japan’s investments in Russian oil and gas projects were all done with support and encouragement from the state. An exit from the Sakhalin projects is not a business-only decision and it’s misleading to assume that Mitsui’s CEO will be the final authority.
When considering Japanese ownership structure, it’s clear the state is directly invested alongside private business and is also a key financial guarantor. For example, the SODECO consortium is half owned by the state. Some other shareholders like trading house Itochu Corp are private, but others like oil exploration firm JAPEX are part-owned by the state and controlled by METI and other government structures.
Even Mitsui & Co, entirely a private company, can’t make a decision on Sakhalin II without also making the same decision on Arctic LNG 2, a project that has yet to begin production, but which won Japanese state and financial backing as recently as 2019.
The current goal of both PM Kishida, METI, and domestic firms is to lie low and hope that pressure on Russia from other directions distracts from the Japanese oil and gas investments. Just like Europe can’t immediately ditch Russian gas supply, so Japan can’t easily walk away from Russian oil, gas, and coal. For more details on Japanese energy imports from Russia, see last week’s Analysis section.
Russian LNG accounts for 11.5% of Japan’s January imports
(Japan NRG, February 28)

Breakdown of Russian LNG imports by the customs region (January)

JERA says SWIFT ban won’t affect Russian LNG imports
(S&P Global, Feb. 28)
Toshiba, Tohoku University develop EV motor magnet with less neodymium rare earth
(Company statement, March 1)
BY MAYUMI WATANABE
Gas Markets in Turmoil Mean
Second Thoughts Over “Carbon-Neutral” LNG
As the war in Ukraine further pounds natural gas markets already facing upheaval and soaring prices, major industry players now have to grapple with a wide array of issues in order to bring order and calm to the sector.
One of those issues in Japan is the future of “carbon-neutral” LNG (CN-LNG), a product that offers both the molecules and credits that claim to offset the emissions from the fuel. After taking off a year ago with sales of CN-LNG to Tokyo Gas, the niche sector has quickly expanded to involve over 40 gas utilities in Japan.
That momentum is now slowing, however, as higher LNG prices eat into company budgets for the CN premiums. It was true even before recent sanctions linked to the war cast doubt on the viability of some energy transactions.
The war in Ukraine is starting to reshape energy markets and the CN-LNG sector, which was created quickly in just about a year, may now need to take a pause and reflect. Japan’s government and businesses need time to analyze CN-LNG standards and framework, which have lacked a common meeting point not only domestically but globally.
Whether the CN-LNG sector takes stock and rebuilds, or disappears just as quickly, will depend on several key issues.
Required resolutions
For the CN-LNG product offering to have wider credibility, several basic tenets of its business need to be resolved.
The most important one is probably the value and credibility of the carbon offsets system. As of today, Japan’s regulatory framework for GHG reduction is far from complete. The country has yet to launch a system that verifies carbon credit quality, or a national carbon pricing and trading scheme.
The Japan Gas Association has launched studies on CN-LNG, aiming to set up guidelines to clarify product definition, requirements and approach to quantifying carbon and the credits. In March, METI will release its plan for a national carbon pricing and trading scheme.
Once the government clarifies how things are measured and logged, it will be up to the CN-LNG marketplace to embed its activities within the Japanese government emissions system. The Carbon Neutral LNG Buyers Alliance wants (and needs) to certify voluntary credits used as emission cuts in official GHG filings to the Japanese government.
Once the rules for the creation and registration of credits are in place, buyers said they will also ask for more transparency around the various CN-LNG offerings, with the level of information delivered by sellers today varying greatly.
Japan’s CN-LNG market overview
Just one year ago, only Tokyo Gas was supplying CN-LNG to domestic end-users. That changed in August 2021 when Malaysia’s Petronas delivered CN-LNG to Shikoku Electric. Later in the year, it signed a supply agreement with Hiroshima Gas.
By the end of 2021, the Japan Gas Association reported that around 40 out of 197 gas utilities nationwide had plans for CN-LNG. This proves there’s strong interest among end-users since many have embraced 2050 carbon neutrality goals, but either cannot turn to or cannot afford to access renewable energy.
Currently, Japan’s CN-LNG supplies come from the following sources — Shell, Malaysia’s Petronas, Brunei LNG, Mitsubishi Group’s Diamond Gas International, Mitsui & Co., INPEX, and oil refiner ENEOS. Then there’s JAPEX, an upstream oil and gas firm that buys CN-LNG from Diamond Gas International and resells it to city gas utilities. It plans to launch its own CN-LNG product based on its own domestic gas production volumes and access to voluntary credits.
CN-LNG supply portfolio in Japan
|
Supplier |
What is being offset |
Which credits are used |
|
Shell/Tokyo Gas |
GHG |
Verified Carbon Standard (VCS), Climate, Community & Biodiversity (CCB), China Certified Emission Reduction |
|
Brunei LNG |
GHG |
VCS and CCB credits from Shell projects |
|
INPEX |
GHG |
VCS |
|
Diamond Gas International |
GHG |
NA |
|
Petronas |
CO2 |
VCS |
|
Mitsui & Co. |
CO2 |
NA |
|
ENEOS |
CO2 |
NA |
Where companies source credits
How are voluntary carbon offset credits used to offset GHG emissions? Let’s take a look at oil and gas firm INPEX. It’s fully self-sufficient in offset credits earned from its investment in the Indonesian Rimba Raya Biodiversity Reserve Project that could generate 5 million tons of carbon offsets in 2021 to 2025. Similarly, ENEOS generates carbon credits from forest projects in Indonesia.
Tokyo Gas mixes carbon credits. Shell’s voluntary credits are used to offset gas supplied to Yakult, Sakai Chemical Industry and others. Tokyo Gas uses its own credits for some users, while CN-LNG to Saibu Gas utilizes credits that Tokyo Gas sources from third parties. Mitsubishi and Mitsui source credits based on various client needs.
The large gas operators that own LNG tanks — Tokyo Gas, Osaka Gas, Toho Gas, and Hokuriku Lnes, a gas arm of Hokuriku Electric — directly import CN-LNG for resale to
|
Utility |
LNG supply sources |
Credit sources |
Main buyers |
|
Tokyo Gas |
Shell group; Own production in Australia, etc |
Shell, Tokyo Gas, third parties |
Saibu Gas, end-users |
|
Osaka Gas |
Brunei LNG |
Shell Eastern Trading |
8 city gas operators, end-users |
|
Toho Gas |
Diamond Gas International, INPEX |
Diamond Gas International, INPEX |
End-users |
|
Hiroshima Gas |
Petronas |
Petronas |
End-users |
|
Hokkaido Gas |
Mitsui & Co owned projects |
Mitsui & Co |
End-users |
|
Tobu Gas |
To be decided |
To be decided |
To be decided |
|
Hachinohe Gas |
ENEOS |
ENEOS |
End-users |
|
Shizuoka Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
End-users |
|
Matsue City Gas |
ENEOS |
ENEOS |
End-users |
|
Izumo Gas |
ENEOS |
ENEOS |
End-users |
|
Obihiro Gas |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Ome Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Tomakomai Gas |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
End-users |
|
Shibata Gas |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Buyo Gas |
NA |
NA |
Own consumption of up to 67,900 m3/ year |
|
Shirone Gas |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Komatsu Gas |
Japanese trading houses via Hokuriku Electric |
Trading houses |
End-users |
|
Kiryu Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Gunma Bank, other end-users |
|
Bushu Gas |
Tokyo Gas |
NA |
End-users |
|
Saitama Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Daito Gas |
NA |
NA |
One end-user |
|
Honjo Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Saibu Gas |
Tokyo Gas |
Tokyo Gas to source credits from third party brokers |
End-users |
|
Iruma Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
End-users |
|
Horikawa Sangyo |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Keiyo Gas |
NA |
NA |
End-users |
|
Noda Gas |
NA |
NA |
End-users |
|
Atsugi Gas |
NA |
NA |
End-users |
|
Echigo Natural Gas |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Diamond Gas International via JAPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Ebara Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Own consumption |
|
Tokai Gas |
Various |
J Credits owned by Tokai Gas |
End-users |
|
Okayama Gas |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption, end users from 2022 |
|
Shikoku Gas |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption |
|
Shingu Gas |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption |
|
Daiwa Gas |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption |
|
Tottori Gas |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption |
|
Tokai Energy |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption |
|
Nabari Kintetsu Gas |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
End-users |
|
Biwako Blue Energy |
Osaka Gas |
Shell Eastern Trading |
Own consumption |
|
Nihonkai Gas |
INPEX |
INPEX |
Hokuriku Bank, other end-users |
|
Hokuriku Lnes |
Japanese trading houses |
Trading houses |
Komatsu Gas, end-users |
other city gas operators, as well as to end-users. Currently, there are 23 smaller utilities that started to supply end-users, or plan to start supplies this year.
The Japan Gas Association estimates that if 2 billion m3, or 5% of Japan’s city gas demand, were carbon neutral, then carbon credits of 5 million tons would be needed.
Hot market, but confusion abounds
The Japan Gas Association said there were 107 CN-LNG end-users as of Dec. 31, and 64 were manufacturers. Interest is strong in industry-intensive Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka areas, while less in areas with fewer listed companies.
One end-user in the Kanto region said his company sought to increase the volume of CN-LNG but was told it wasn’t possible to do so under the same terms. “We signed up to CN-LNG because renewable power wasn’t so available. One year later, it’s the other way around,” he said.
On the other hand, a utility in northwest Japan said that only one end-user signed up in the first three months of service. Another company limited the use of CN-LNG to just one out of seven plants, because management wants to see how the service develops first and to monitor changes in GHG reporting regulations.
End-users were also required to make efforts to clarify the terms of CN-LNG products and services, since the Japanese context is different from overseas. The scope of CN-LNG offered in Japan includes drilling, production, liquefaction, storage, shipping, regasification, gas transmission, storage, and end use.
A Japan NRG survey showed that while INPEX and Tokyo Gas were transparent about where their credits come from, others did not disclose details to the public. Some Japanese gas utilities confirmed that, in reality, CN-LNG may not cover the end-user emissions from gas consumption, and they may need to source additional offset credits to completely offset either GHG or just carbon.
The subtle differences in the CN-LNG offerings confused end-users, prompting the Japan Gas Association to start writing guidelines on what comprises CN-LNG.
Regulatory challenges
A lack of regulatory visibility is also a problem. Utilities say that end-users have needs that are too varied, from cutting overall GHGs throughout the Scope III supply chain to proof that they are taking some kind of green measures to show to shareholders.
Companies report annual carbon emissions to METI, via industry associations, on a voluntary basis. There is no penalty if they fail to report.
The MoE requires companies with over 1,500 kiloliters/ year of energy consumption to file GHG emission reports every July. Companies emitting over 3,000 CO2 equivalent tons/year of GHGs must also report. There are fines for failing to report, as well as for fraudulent reporting of such emissions.
Presently, voluntary credits for CN-LNG can’t be used for filings to the government. However, J-Credits can be used. According to a METI study, overseas voluntary credits typically trade at $1-5/ ton, and the local J-credits at $14-18/ ton.
METI, taking note of the increase in the variety of players in the offset credit market, has defined four regulatory frameworks that need to be established immediately:
This month, a METI panel is expected to release a proposal on the launch of a national carbon exchange. Trial runs are scheduled for fall of 2022, and a formal launch in April 2023. The roadmaps for the three other frameworks remain unclear.
If the government and industry can work together to establish these standards and measures, then the CN-LNG system has a good chance to be further implemented throughout Japan’s gas sector.
BY MASUTOMO TAKEHIRO
Japan Accelerates Geothermal Capacity Rollout
at Home and Abroad, but Project Size Frustrates
Japan’s government has recently drawn a clearer blueprint for geothermal, the country’s promising yet largely untapped renewable energy source. The end goal is to drive private companies to expand business at home and abroad. With the right policies and state support, Japan has the potential to become a global leader in geothermal.
Since the Fukushima disaster, the number of Japan’s geothermal facilities have quadrupled to over 90, but many sites are mini-sized. While statistics show installed geothermal capacity in Japan remains at a meager 481 MW, the ambition is to grow it to 1.55 GW, which is roughly 1% of the country’s total power needs by 2030.
Even if Japan reaches that goal for geothermal, it would still be just the beginning for the industry. Research shows the country has potential for at least 23.5 GW of geothermal capacity. If Japan could even reach 25% of that amount, it would easily be the world leader. To put the matter in context, total global capacity is 16.4 GW. Currently, the world’s top geothermal energy producer is the U.S. with installed capacity of 3.71 GW, followed by Indonesia with 2.13 GW.
Clearer government vision
Investment risk and lack of large-scale facilities constitute the main obstacle and challenge to growing geothermal capacity, which in general is an arduous process. On average, global geothermal growth for 2022-2032 will be a sluggish 5%. Compare that to an approximate 15% growth in wind power capacity in 2020 alone, according to the Global Wind Energy Council.
Japan’s latest Basic Energy Plan, unveiled in October 2021, offers hope. As a reflection of former Prime Minister Suga administration’s enthusiasm for renewable energy, the Plan pays more attention to geothermal with a variety of new policy directions. Here are some main points:
Spending plans
According to one study, the cost of building and operating a geothermal power plant in Japan is ¥10-¥18 per KW (excluding tax), which is two to three times higher than in the U.S. and New Zealand. In Japan, it costs around ¥500 million to drill a geothermal well, but without digging it’s impossible to know whether hot water will come out. The success rate is around 30%. Therefore, improving the accuracy of potential resource mapping is a top priority.
In terms of public investment, METI has included ¥18.3 billion for geothermal development in its FY2022 budget request, an increase of 60% from the previous year, when ¥11 billion was secured.
As Japan’s first 10 MW-plus geothermal project in 23 years, the 46 MW double flash Wasabizawa Geothermal Power Plant opened in Akita Prefecture in May 2019. This will be followed by the 15 MW Appi Plant in Iwate Prefecture in 2024, and the 15 MW Katatsumuriyama Plant in Akita Prefecture in 2025, and the 15 MW Kijiyama Plant in Akita Prefecture in 2029. No other large-scale geothermal projects are on the horizon, however.
Meanwhile, as for mid-sized plants, 6.5 MW and 2 MW facilities are scheduled to be operational in Hokkaido and Kumamoto prefectures this year. Based on this reality, the Japan Geothermal Association requested the government in October 2021 to maintain the FIT price for geothermal power, and pass the Geothermal Power Act that’s harmonious with the Hot Spring Act.
Private investments up
In geothermal, Japanese trade houses are signing engineering, procurement and construction contracts with overseas companies and accumulating know-how. Toyota Tsusho has an order for the Olkaria geothermal plant in Kenya, with a maximum output of 280 MW, one of the world’s biggest.
Itochu and Kyushu Electric, are participating in a 330 MW geothermal project in North Sumatra, Indonesia. In addition, a 98 MW geothermal power plant in South Sumatra, in which Marubeni and Tohoku Electric are participating, started operation in December.
Meanwhile, JAPEX will set up a new division dedicated to geothermal, and Osaka Gas will invest ¥120 billion in renewable energy projects over three years from fiscal 2021, including geothermal. In April 2021, Kyushu Electric said it would invest ¥250 billion in geothermal power and other renewables over five years from FY2021.
Construction companies are also rushing into the industry. In July 2021, Obayashi Corporation built a geothermal power facility as well as a hydrogen production demonstration plant in Kokonoe Town, Oita Prefecture. The hydrogen has been shipped as fuel for marine fuel cell systems and Toyota’s hydrogen-powered racing cars. This is the first demonstration project in Japan to supply hydrogen produced by geothermal power.
In November 2021, Shimizu Corporation started the construction of a demonstration plant to produce hydrogen using electricity from geothermal power in the same town. Likewise, Takenaka Corporation announced in April 2021 that it had entered into a geothermal power generation project in Takayama City, Gifu Prefecture.
Global demand
Plans are underway to establish a new financial support system to make it easier for companies to enter the geothermal business overseas, by possibly amending the JOGMEC Act. Similarly, Japan’s Foreign Ministry is reportedly preparing to create new projects for FY2022 to support developing countries, with geothermal and other renewable energy projects in mind.
INPEX issued ¥10 billion in green bonds in October 2021 to develop geothermal power plants and other projects in Japan and abroad. The oil firm said in December that it had participated in the Muara Laboh Geothermal Power Generation project in West Sumatra, Indonesia. The company added in February that it would invest up to ¥1 trillion in decarbonization-related projects, including geothermal power generation, by 2030.
At the same time, global demand for turbines has soared, creating an opportunity for Japanese manufacturers. Toshiba Energy Systems has delivered turbines to geothermal power plants in 11 countries around the world. Compared with other overseas manufacturers, Toshiba’s turbines can withstand long-term specifications without losing output.
The company plans to further expand its turbine business in Indonesia and East Africa, and wants to add larger and smaller turbines to its lineup. Also, MHI has delivered geothermal turbines to 13 countries, and in a pleasant surprise, its market share in Iceland has reached 55%.
Finally, the development of next-gen geothermal technology is accelerating. Taisei Corporation, together with the Geothermal Energy Research & Development Co., is working on generating electricity by turning turbines with high-temperature CO2 instead of water. On-site demonstrations will begin in 2026, and hopefully put the technology to practical use from 2036.
Given its ample geothermal potential, Japan would miss a great opportunity to expand its renewables base if it doesn’t take more determined action on this front. The interest from top government and business is there. However, a lack of bureaucratic resources allotted to developing geothermal capacity is also visible, mostly because it lacks the scalability of solar and wind.
Still, with Japan hard pressed to meet net-zero goals by 2030, every option has to be explored and every little bit counts.
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/ Wind power
Spain’s Acciona Energía said construction of its planned 923 MW MacIntyre wind farm in Queensland was approved. Once built, the project will be 70% owned by Acciona, with 30% held by Ark Energy, a subsidiary of Korea Zinc whose goal is to decarbonize the group’s energy supply.
Germany/ Wind and solar
The Economy Ministry plans to triple new onshore wind and solar facilities, and wants to accelerate the country’s goal to generate all electricity from renewables by 2035, instead of 2050. Germany will diversify energy sources away from Russia, on whom it relies for over half of its natural gas.
Green investment
Macquarie’s Green Investment Group announced plans to launch an offshore wind business – Corio Generation. It will commence operations in April 2022, with a project pipeline of over 15 GW – one of the world’s largest.
India/ Solar power
India added more than 10 GW of solar PV in 2021, reaching cumulative installed solar capacity of 49 GW, according to Mercom India Research. The 10 GW of new capacity made in 2021 represented a 210% increase YoY.
Pakistan/ Gas
During his trip to Moscow just hours after Russian forces invaded Ukraine, PM Imran Khan signed a deal to import about 2 million tons of wheat and buy natural gas. “We signed agreements to import natural gas because Pakistan’s own gas reserves are depleting,” Khan said.
Russia/ Energy divestments
In the wake of the Russian invasion, Shell will end its partnership with Gazprom, selling a 27.5% stake in the Sakhalin-II oil and gas project. BP will end relations with Rosneft, which accounts for half of BP’s oil and gas reserves, and a third of its production. ExxonMobil will stop operating its Sakhalin-I oil and gas project, and halt new investments in Russia. Also, Norway’s $1.3 trillion sovereign wealth fund will divest its Russian assets.
Saudi Arabia/ Battery storage
A consortium composed of ACWA Power, SPIC Huanghe Hydropower Development and Saudi Tabreed Cooling raised $1.3 billion to invest in infrastructure for the world’s largest off-grid battery energy storage system, with capacity of 1.3 GWh.
Ukraine/ Nuclear power
After armed hostilities between Russian and Ukrainian troops ignited a fire on the premises, the Russian army took the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which is Europe’s largest. It’s located in central Ukraine in the city of Enerhodar on the banks of the Dnieper River.
U.S./ Fossil fuel divestment
Insurance company AIG will stop insuring and investing in companies that derive more than 30% of revenue from coal-fired power, thermal coal mines or oil sands projects. AIG plans to achieve net-zero emissions across its global underwriting and investment portfolios by 2050.
U.S./ Oil and gas
Republicans are urging President Biden to increase domestic oil and gas production, and to wean the nation and allies off Russian oil. The U.S. gets 5% to 10% of its crude oil and refined products from Russia. Sanctions imposed on Russia so far don’t include oil and gas exports.
U.S./ Solar power
Solar power generation rose by 25.2% in 2021, making it the country’s fastest-growing source of electricity; renewables accounted for 21% of all electricity and in 2022 will surpass coal in terms of total production. For 2022, the U.S. Energy Information Administration expects 21.8 GW of new utility-scale solar capacity and 4.4 GW of small-scale solar capacity to come online. It also predicts 7.6 GW of new wind capacity to come online.
A selection of domestic and international events we believe will have an impact on Japanese energy
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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) |
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February |
Chinese New Year (Jan. 31 to Feb. 6); Beijing Winter Olympics; South Korea joins RCEP trade agreement |
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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 |
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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 |
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May |
World Natural Gas Conference WCG2022 – South Korea; Elections: Australian general election; Philippines general and presidential elections |
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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 |
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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 |
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August |
Japan: Africa (TICAD 8) Summit – Tunisia; Kenyan general election |
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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 |
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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; |
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November |
COP27 – Egypt; U.S. mid-term elections; Soccer World Cup – Qatar; |
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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
・PM Kishida says Japanese firms will decide on Russia oil & gas future but confirms energy security is the vital consideration
・Cabinet approves key energy act amendments to reach net-zero goals as government turns proactive in pushing for change
・Japan to make world’s second-largest release from oil stockpiles after the U.S. as part of action coordinated by the IEA