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LNG stocks at Japan's power utilities rise
LNG stocks at Japan's power utilities rise
Osaka, 15 April (Argus) — LNG stocks at Japan's main power utilities increased in the week to 12 April, and gas-fired generation edged higher given lower output from base-load nuclear and coal-fired fleets. The utilities held 2.29mn t of LNG inventories on 12 April, up by 3.2pc from the previous week's revised 2.22mn t, according to a weekly survey by Japan's trade and industry ministry Meti. This was also higher by 7.5pc compared with 2.13mn t on 13 April 2025 and up by 8pc against the end-April average of 2.12mn t over 2021-25. Japan's gas-fired generation climbed to around 4.1TWh over 6-12 April, up by 3.1pc from a week earlier, according to the country's power agency the Organisation for Cross-regional Co-ordination of Transmission Operators (Occto). The increase is estimated to have raised LNG consumption by about 16,080t, assuming an average gas-fired generation efficiency of 50pc. Higher gas-fired output came despite softer electricity demand given a seasonal rise in temperatures. Utilities were encouraged to increase gas-fired utilisation, as coal-fired generation fell by 16pc from a week earlier to 3.4TWh during 6-12 April, after several coal-fired units were shut for regular maintenance. Oil-fired output also dropped by 28pc to 35.4GWh. Power supply from nuclear reactors totalled 1.7TWh during the week to 12 April, down by 4.2pc from a week earlier. Utility Kansai Electric Power shut the 870MW Takahama No.3 reactor on 7 April for regular turnaround, which prompted the utility to boost replacement gas-fired output. Overall gas-fired output in the Kansai area rose by 49pc on the week to 581GWh over 6-12 April. The increase in LNG inventories despite higher gas-fired output indicates that utilities received more LNG than they consumed last week. Japan imported 1.16mn t of LNG over 6-12 April, including volumes for city gas production, up from 1.13mn t a week earlier, data from oil analytics firm Vortexa show. Japan's power demand averaged 86GW during 6-12 April, down by 0.7pc from a week earlier, Occto data show. By Motoko Hasegawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
France pushes for electrification on Mideast Gulf war
France pushes for electrification on Mideast Gulf war
London, 13 April (Argus) — French prime minister Sebastien Lecornu has called for rapid electrification in response to the rise in fossil fuel prices caused by the Middle East war, and unveiled new measures to reach the goal. "As long as we depend on crude and gas we will continue to pay for others' wars," he said on Friday, 10 April presenting his electrification plan that the government began working on before the Iran crisis. France will double its annual spending on electrification to €10bn ($11.8bn) from €5.5bn, Lecornu said on 10 April. For residential heating, gas boilers will be banned in new buildings from the end of the year. Heating systems relying solely on gas were already de facto banned in new builds, and hybrid systems were becoming increasingly less common. The government will also choose 100 local areas to put on a "zero gas" trajectory by 2030. It aims to reduce gas consumption by 85 TWh/yr by 2030, or roughly a quarter of current consumption. The government wants to install 1mn heat pumps a year by 2030. Sales previously reached this level over 2021-23 before falling back, and French president Emmanuel Macron in 2023 announced a previous target to reach 1mn heat pumps produced in France each year by 2027. The government also wants two-thirds of new vehicles to be electric by 2030, compared with 28pc in March, a record high. And French manufacturers should build 400,000 EVs a year by 2027, and 1mn by 2030, up from about 200,000 last year. A new subsidised EV leasing scheme covering 50,000 vehicles will be introduced, alongside an existing scheme that leases 50,000 vehicles/yr to people on low incomes. By Rhys Talbot Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
EU eyes gas filling and oil stock co-ordination
EU eyes gas filling and oil stock co-ordination
Brussels, 13 April (Argus) — EU-wide co-ordination of gas storage filling and oil stock releases are among measures the European Commission will present on 22 April to tackle the energy crisis, said commission president Ursula von der Leyen on Monday. Von der Leyen said bloc-wide co-ordination of gas storage filling is aimed at preventing member states from competing against each other, and co-ordinated oil stock releases are intended to achieve the largest possible effect on markets. The bloc's fossil fuel import bill has increased by more than €22bn ($25.8bn) since the start of the US-Iran war on 28 February, von der Leyen said after discussions with EU commissioners. She said the "smallest" part of energy costs comes from the emissions trading system (ETS). Von der Leyen will "shortly" consult with EU states on updated ETS benchmarks using "all the flexibilities" the legal text allows, she said. The commission is "on track" to present the full review of the ETS in July, and will put forward legal proposals on electricity taxes and grid charges in May, with an "ambitious" new target on electrification. "The grim reality is that fossil fuels will remain the most expensive options in the years to come," von der Leyen said. She added that renewables and nuclear together now account for over 70pc of EU electricity generation. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Q&A: Australian firms explore Regos on low LGC prices
Q&A: Australian firms explore Regos on low LGC prices
Sydney, 13 April (Argus) — Australian environmental services provider Ecovantage registered the first renewable electricity facility under Australia's guarantee of origin scheme, and plans to soon start exploring a new market for the upcoming renewable guarantees of origin (Regos). Chief executive Aaron Jenkins spoke with Argus about expectations for the new product and how historically low large-scale generation certificate (LGC) prices have been impacting the market. Edited highlights follow: Ecovantage registered the first facility that will be able to generate Regos, a small 0.17MW solar installation in New South Wales state . Why did you decide to register early into this voluntary scheme when the Large-scale Renewable Energy Target (LRET) scheme will last until the end of 2030 ? Certificates in environmental commodities are the core business of Ecovantage. We've already had a lot of interest from ESG-type consumers on time-stamped renewable energy certificates, and Regos fit that brief. We've had interest for years from multinationals who operate under various frameworks outside Australia, where time stamping is a valuable option. With the LGC market being in a very bad way and with participation in the LRET falling, we thought it was a good opportunity to explore what alternatives are there. LGC prices being so low is causing quite a lot of headwind for the commercial solar industry in particular. Business cases are not being approved. Solar deployment is slowing. What are your expectations for these intervening years, where LGCs and Regos will coexist together , and for further ahead? Regos are likely to have a higher value than LGCs depending on the time of the day that they're generated. If they are worth more, we think there could be more engagement from businesses who have generating assets but who don't want to create an LGC for a negligible amount, or from companies looking to make a business case for deploying new rooftop solar assets. At the moment, the Clean Energy Regulator (CER) is letting us register the same power station for the LRET and the Rego programme. We can't create Regos and LGCs against the same MWh, but we can have assets register on both frameworks and pick and choose which one they participate in on a quarter-by-quarter basis. There will be a lot of other entities testing this as well. How do you see the transition from the LRET, a compliance market, to the fully voluntary Rego scheme? It is probably 10 years too early to go forward as a voluntary programme. We've been very vocal in saying it should be a compliance mechanism until the country reaches its 82pc renewables goals . The opportunity we see with Regos is for generation assets which are being underappreciated under the LRET to reap greater financial benefit, by being more transparent and providing more granular certificates to the market. How much of an increased benefit that is, we have to wait and see. How do you think the granularity will work out? LGCs work with annual vintages, while with Regos we're going down to hourly timestamps. But it's left up to industry as to how we stratify them. We see such demand to a small part already with LGCs, for entities that want to purchase certificates generated in a certain month, in a certain region, from a certain type of renewable technology. However, it relies heavily on the certificate creator as to how they put the data into the registry, how detailed they go in tagging it. I think the stratification is going to be much bigger with Regos because of its complexity. One of the things that will be interesting to see is how ESG frameworks recognise the ability to have this granularity, because the voluntary markets are very closely tied to these frameworks. If Climate Active or some of those other major programs don't require time stamping and granularity, then one could make the argument of why would you ever bother buying a nighttime Rego? Even if you're a data centre that runs 24 hours a day, why wouldn't you just buy twice the amount of daytime Regos when they're cheap? I think how ESG frameworks are written are going to have a real direct market impact on what we see Regos selling for. The main ESG frameworks in Australia currently recognise LGCs and not Regos, but voluntary demand for LGCs has been increasing , correct? A lot of the LGC demand at the moment is only there because the LGC price is so low. We work with a lot of organisations which have chosen not to deploy their own renewable assets at this point in history because LGCs are so cheap. They'd rather just buy cheap LGCs than take real action. LGC spot prices in the secondary market were declining steadily but have been hovering around the A$3/MWh mark in recent weeks . Is that mostly because of resistance from some sellers to go below that level due to costs? There's a cost to create. By the time you create the LGCs, pay metering subscriptions to get the data, pay the CER to register them, pay a broker to find a buyer or a seller, and then spend time validating them, it's not worth going below A$3/MWh. Can you please elaborate on those costs? Some market participants mention an issuance fee of A$0.08/MWh as the main cost. You're paying a monthly or an annual metering subscription on every data connection you've got. You're paying someone to sit there and create the LGCs because there's no automated API into the registry, so a human has to do it. You're then paying a broker to find a buyer and a seller and line them up. And on the other end, a company has to pay someone to handle or surrender the LGCs — in our case, we'll surrender them on behalf of the organisations that engage us in that voluntary market. That also takes time. The LGC market as it remains is non-viable. There needs to be a policy update there. If there was a relevant policy update, do you think we could see LGC prices moving up again? If the government wants a rapid mobilisation of commercial and industrial renewables, especially behind-the-meter facilities, they need to get certificate prices above A$20/MWh. Get the price above that, and you will see a flood of new renewables being deployed. By Liang Lei and Juan Weik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
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Argus launches Australian large-scale generation certificate prices
Argus launches Australian LGC prices as the market stays highly liquid and continues to trade at a premium to most regional renewable certificate markets.
Middle East conflict: Impact on European gas, global LNG
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