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			Japanese lawmakers lobby for Russian gas pipeline
		
		Japanese lawmakers are reviving efforts for a $5.9 billion natural gas pipeline from Russia, which last week signed a supply deal with China, to cut energy costs after the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
A group of 33 lawmakers is backing the 839 miles pipeline between Russia’s Sakhalin Island and Japan’s Ibaraki prefecture, northeast of Tokyo, Naokazu Takemoto, the secretary general of the group, said in an interview on May 23. He plans to propose the project to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as early as June so it’s on the agenda when Russian President Vladimir Putin visits in autumn, he said.
The shutdown of Japan’s nuclear reactors after the 2011 Fukushima disaster has spurred renewed interest in the Russia Japan pipeline link, which has been discussed for more than a decade, Takemoto said. The effort also highlights Russia’s expanding role as a energy supplier to Asia after the country signed a $400 billion deal last week to sell China 38 billion cubic meters of gas annually for 30 years.
Japan spent a record 7 trillion yen last year on liquefied natural gas imports, more than double the cost three years ago, according to the Ministry of Finance. The country could lower its energy bill by getting gas directly by pipeline rather than more expensive LNG, which is shipped by tankers, Takemoto said.
“Building an LNG plant requires a lot of money and makes the per unit cost of gas very expensive,” said Takemoto, who serves in the House of Representatives as a member of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. “Japan would be better off” buying gas via pipeline, he said.
China Deal
The Russia-China accord for gas supplies by pipeline from eastern Siberia was probably reached at a price of $10.50 to $11/MMBtu, Bank of America said in a report on May 26. That compares with a current spot price of $13.30 for LNG cargoes delivered to Northeast Asia. Spot LNG prices are at a 19-month low after falling from a record of $19.70 in February, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from New York-based Energy Intelligence Group.
While Japan could buy Russian gas at a cheaper price similar to the China deal if the pipeline is built, Russia would also benefit from the project, said Osamu Fujisawa, a Tokyo based independent energy economist.
“Russia wants to extend its market,” Fujisawa said in a phone interview on May 27. “It made a deal with China, and Japan is the next target. Then, Russia doesn’t have to rely on Europe,” which is trying to reduce dependence on the country’s gas supplies amid the crisis in Ukraine, he said.
Post Fukushima
The proposed Russia Japan pipeline is designed to transport as much as 20 billion cubic meters of natural gas annually, according to proposals by the group consistingm of lawmakers from ruling parties LDP and New Komeito. That’s equivalent to about 15 million metric tons of LNG, or 17% of Japan’s imports.
All of Japan’s 48 reactors are shut for safety checks after the magnitude 9 quake and ensuing tsunami in March 2011 caused a triple meltdown at Tokyo Electric Power Fukushima Dai Ichi plant, shaking public confidence in nuclear energy. Power companies have applied for the Nuclear Regulation Authority’s safety review of 18 reactors.
About half of Japan’s reactors may never be restarted because of the nation’s tougher safety standards, Yuji Nishiyama, a Tokyo based analyst with JPMorgan Securities Japan said in a May 26 phone interview. That means the utilities would have to keep importing a large amount of natural gas to fill the gap left by the shutdown, he said.
Japan, the world’s biggest LNG importer, bought 87.49 million metric tons of the fuel in 2013, according to finance ministry data. Russia accounted for 9.8% of the country’s gas and was the fourth biggest supplier after Australia, Qatar and Malaysia
	 
	
		
	
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