Japan's stake in a Russian energy project is in limbo after Putin signed a decree to transfer it to a new entity
But it isn't just any old asset. Japan spent a century and a fortune developing the oil & gas plant in the name of energy security
Now that's unravelling. Thread 🧵
Quick overview:
Putin signed an order this week to transfer the rights to the Sakhalin-2 LNG export project to a new Russian company, which could force foreign owners to abandon their investment
Japanese trading houses have a 22.5% stake in Sakhalin 🇯🇵
Sakhalin is strategically important for Japan because it is the closest LNG project (you can basically see it from Hokkaido)
It takes just 2 days for an LNG shipment from Sakhalin to reach Japan. It takes a month from the US
Sakhalin supplies nearly 10% of Japan's LNG 🚢
Now the history lesson:
The first oil drilling rig was built in Sakhalin, an island to Russia's far east, in 1889. Oil was discovered in the 1890s, and the resources were developed over the next several decades
The Japanese quickly took interest 👀
In 1919, the government in Siberia granted rights to develop the north Sakhalin oil fields to a Japanese government-backed commercial consortium called the Hokushinkai, which was led by the Mitsubishi zaibatsu
Thie was convenient, since domestic Japanese production was declining
A peace treaty with Soviet Russia in 1925 formalized Japan's stake in Sakhalin energy
Under the agreement, Japanese forces pulled back to Karafuto, but a new company (known as North Sakhalin Oil Company) retained rights to half of the north Sakhalin oil fields
Between 1926 and 1944, over a million tons of oil was exported from Sakhalin to Japan
That all fell apart at the end of World War II
Decades later, Japan didn't forget about the energy sources essentially in its backyard
At the first Japan-USSR Economic Joint Conference in 1966, the two nations discussed developing oil and gas in Sakhalin. This time Marubeni (another Japanese trading house) was interested
Japan and the Soviet Union signed a preliminary deal to explore Sakhalin in 1972
But things accelerated after the oil shock of 1973 pushed Japan to search for nearby energy assets. In 1975, the two nations agreed for Japan to participate in oil and gas exploration in Sakhalin
Seventeen Japanese companies created Sodeco (Sakhalin Oil Dvelopment Co-Operation Co.), which partnered with the USSR to jointly look for oil and gas
Sodeco was 44% owned by the Japanese government
Efforts soon paid off. Several large oil fields were found in the late 1970s
But then the US imposed economic sanctions against the USSR. And all that progress grinded to a halt
In 1982 export restrictions were extended to the Sakhalin project, which didn't make anything any easier for the Japanese government
Despite all of this, the Sakhalin-2 project was essentially born in 1984 with some test wells, spearheaded by Mitsui (another Japanese trading house)
In the next decade, Mitsui brought onboard Marathon Oil, Mitsubishi, Shell
The group got rights to develop the gas field in 1992
Mitsui and partners formed Sakhalin Energy Investment Co. in 1994 to own and operate the Sakhalin-2 project
(Remember: Putin just signed a decree to transfer Sakhalin-2 from Sakhalin Energy Investment to a new Russian company)
From here, things went pretty smoothly
In 1999, first oil was produced at the Piltun-Astokhskoye field 🚢
But Mitsui really wanted to develop a natural gas field, liquefy that gas, then ship it abroad
Japan's government wanted that gas, and the partners wanted the money 💰
In 2003, the Sakhalin partners formally agreed to launch phase two of the project: a massive liquefied natural gas export facility
They soon started construction of two LNG export trains, and were racking up contracts with Japanese importers
But all of those environmental concerns quickly disappeared when Gazprom was allowed to take a 50% (plus one share) stake in Sakhalin Energy Investment for $7.45 billion, which was seen as cheap at the time
Gazprom purchased the stake from Shell, Mitsui and Mitsubishi
After Gazprom gained majority ownership of Sakhalin, Putin returned the permit and development of the LNG facility continued relatively smoothly
LNG exports began in 2009 (a small delay from the 2007 target, but who is counting?)
For the last 13 years, Sakhalin-2 has been a reliable source of LNG for Japan
Even after Russia invaded Ukraine, Japan Prime Minister Kishida has called it “an extremely important project for energy security,” and said the government has no plans to leave the project
Putin this week issued a decree that threatens Japan’s ownership of the Sakhalin LNG plant
Japan’s government and businesses spent decades developing it
Will they be able to easily abandon it? Or will they negotiate to stay?
Japan’s government hasn’t said whether they will try to join the new Russian company that will hold Sakhalin
Putin’s decree gives them a month to decide and apply. But it’s also ultimately Russia’s call whether to let them in
Japan’s trade minister said yesterday they will try to diversify supply away from Russia 🇯🇵 👀
Even if Japan ultimately leaves Sakhalin, history has shown that the government will never stop thinking about how to tap the resources just a hair north of Hokkaido
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Qatar is attempting to send LNG shipments through Hormuz for first time since the Iran war started 🚨🚨
If successful, this would be the first time a loaded LNG tanker has gone through Hormuz in over a month. ~20% of global LNG supply traverses Hormuz, so would be a big deal
The Al Daayen and Rasheeda, which each loaded LNG from Qatar’s export plant in late-February, are moving toward Hormuz
The vessels had been idling in the Gulf as the war escalated and Hormuz remained largely closed to shipping
The potential pass through Hormuz may be a shot in the arm for Qatar, which supplied nearly a fifth of all LNG last year, even as the country’s Ras Laffan export plant has been shut for over a month due to Iranian attacks
Four charts that show how China is beating the US in the energy race
🇨🇳⚡🇺🇸
1) Since 2021, China has added more power capacity than the US has in its history
Via @lili_pike
2) China is expected to add over 3.4TW of capacity over the next 5 years, almost 6-times as much as the US
3) China fielded a record number of proposals for new coal-fired power plants last year — even as generation from fossil fuels fell amid a surge of clean energy
The building boom underscores the government’s priority of ensuring stable energy supplies
Orders for turbines for natural gas power plants are vastly outpacing supply, threatening the world’s ability to keep pace with rising electricity demand
🧵 Thread on how we got here and what it means for power-hungry nations
The crux of the issue is that the gas turbine market is dominated by three companies -- Siemens Energy, GE Vernova, Mitsubishi Heavy
Theyve been caught flat footed by an acceleration in orders over the last few years. And they aren’t able (or willing) to quickly boost output
So, what is a gas turbine?
Its a 500-ton machine that is just like the jet engine, but to produce electricity instead of flight
Natural gas is burned to spin blades at speeds higher than 3,000 rotations a minute to powers a connected generator
The US, France (once cornerstones of the nuclear industry) are struggling with delays and cost overruns
Russia and China dominate, but face security concerns in the west
That leaves an opportunity for South Korea, which has diligently been building its atomic industry
As much as $9 trillion of nuclear investment will be required in the next quarter century to triple nuclear capacity
According to a Bloomberg analysis of the more than 400 planned and proposed nuclear reactors, Korea is positioned to win business with as many as 43% of them