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Japan May Ask People to Cut Back on Natural Gas Next

Published 07/10/2022, 10:50 PM
Updated 07/10/2022, 11:09 PM
© Bloomberg. Cyclists travel past Tokyo Gas Co. storage tanks at the company's Hiranuma facility in Yokohama, Japan, on Wednesday, April 20, 2022. Japan’s imports jumped 31% in March from a year ago to a record value, led by crude oil, coal and natural gas, and that will translate into higher power bills in the nation that relies heavily on others for its energy resources. Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg
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(Bloomberg) -- Japan may ask households and businesses to cut back on natural gas use on concerns that stable supplies from Russia could be disrupted. 

The country’s trade ministry will create a framework allowing it to call on large companies to curb gas use when supply is tight, Nikkei report from Sunday, without saying where it got the information. The government will first ask households and businesses to curb gas usage to the best of their abilities, and if that’s not enough to avoid supply shortages will follow up with specific conservation targets, the report said. Details of the framework will be discussed among a ministry panel before demand for the fuel peaks in winter, according to the report. 

The report comes after recent moves by Russia to transfer the rights to the Sakhalin-2 natural gas project to a new company, which could threaten foreign owners including Japanese firms. The Japanese government is already asking its citizens to play their part in power conservation, as electricity supply is expected to be tight this summer and winter.

Japan is expected to have enough power supply this week, with rainy weather expected to lower temperatures in several parts of the country. The power-reserve ratio, which measure spare capacity of generators, is expected to be lowest for the Tokyo area on Wednesday at 7.1%, according to the trade ministry, still above the 3% needed for a stable grid. Japan’s next-day spot electricity price settled at 31.22 yen a kilowatt-hour on Monday, according to the Japan Electric Power Exchange, down 3.8% from a week earlier. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

© Bloomberg. Cyclists travel past Tokyo Gas Co. storage tanks at the company's Hiranuma facility in Yokohama, Japan, on Wednesday, April 20, 2022. Japan’s imports jumped 31% in March from a year ago to a record value, led by crude oil, coal and natural gas, and that will translate into higher power bills in the nation that relies heavily on others for its energy resources. Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg

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