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China, Japan and South Korea ramp up winter fuel stockpiles to cut costly LNG amid global energy crisis

  • Asia’s major liquefied natural gas importers are grappling with soaring prices after Russia cut supplies to Europe following its invasion of Ukraine
  • Countries such as China, Japan and South Korea are storing fuel, varying sources and saving energy to establish sufficient supplies for the colder months

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A liquefied natural gas (LNG) tanker is tugged towards a thermal power station in Futtsu, Japan. Photo: Reuters

Key Asian economies are stockpiling fuel, diversifying sources and conserving power to ensure adequate supplies for winter, as an unprecedented global energy crisis makes spot liquefied natural gas (LNG) purchases costly.

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Major LNG importers – Japan, South Korea and China – have been grappling with soaring prices of the super-chilled fuel after Russia cut supplies to Europe following its invasion of Ukraine, leading to a surge in Asian spot prices as well.

A plunge in the value of local currencies from Japanese yen to Chinese yuan against the US dollar has also increased the burden of costly energy imports on these economies.

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Led by crude oil, LNG and coal, Japan’s September imports jumped 45.9 per cent year-on-year to hit a record high in terms of value as a weak yen aggravated already high fuel import costs.

“Our basic approach is to have relatively high inventories during this winter … while adjusting the delivery schedule of LNG tankers to reflect demand,” the CFO of Tokyo Gas, Japan’s biggest city gas supplier, said last Thursday.

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