LNG shipments tagged “carbon neutral” are gaining popularity in Asia, despite criticism that the offsets used don’t actually cancel out emissions from the fuel 🏭
Japan, which is looking for ways to cut emissions, continues to be the main destination 🇯🇵
In the past month, BP and Petronas delivered so-called green cargoes to customers in N. Asia
However, carbon credits purchased for the shipments didn’t cover emissions from combustion of the natural gas, which produces roughly 70% of total emissions
Critics, including those from within the industry, have called for more transparency when it comes to offsetting emissions from fossil fuels with carbon credits
With about a month to go before the start of the heating season, Europe doesn’t have enough natural gas in storage and isn’t building inventories fast enough either. Gas and power prices are hitting new records
Meanwhile, Sanae Takaichi, who is also running to be Japan's next prime minister, says that the government should make building compact fusion reactors a national project
Something interesting is happening in the spot uranium market 👀☢️
Uranium futures have surged to a 6-year high. And its bull run is poised to continue due -- at least in part -- to a single fund aggressively buying physical supplies
The Sprott Physical Uranium Trust was launched earlier this year, and recently started to Tweet about how much physical uranium it has been buying
That's aided the commodity’s recent surge to a six-year high
Sprott is buying at a rate that is double the typical total annual uranium volume traded. Not double the float. Double the market.
In just three weeks, Sprott’s buying has pushed the price of uranium up by more than 30%
Japan to invest in a blue ammonia project amid effort to reduce emissions 🇯🇵
Mitsubishi partners with Shell to produce ammonia from natural gas w/ CCS in Canada, Nikkei says. Ammonia will be shipped to Japan and used to dilute fuel at coal power plants
The $1 billion project will produce roughly 1 million tons/year of blue ammonia by the second half of this decade, the Nikkei says
Japan aims to import 3 million tons/year of ammonia just for use in the power sector by 2030
Please note that there has been a lot of debate about whether blue hydrogen/ammonia is actually worse for the environment than just burning the natural gas
A controversial study was released last month. Here is a recap from Platts:
Japan’s renewable energy stocks surged on Monday as @konotarogomame -- a politician who supports phasing out nuclear power -- emerged as a top contender to become the nation's next prime minister 🇯🇵
"People generally agree we should not add any more nuclear reactors. And any nuclear reactor that has been operated for 40 years should be de-commissioned. Then, by 2050, our nuclear power will be zero," Kono said in Sept. 2011
But according to other specialists, Japan must have at least 27 of its remaining 36 reactors online by 2030 to hit its obligations under the Paris climate