Japanese gas distributor Osaka Gas and Australian independent Santos plan to produce e-methane from green hydrogen in Australia and export it to Japan from 2030.
Osaka Gas and Santos will build facilities to produce green hydrogen and e-methane as part of the project, Osaka Gas said on 7 March. The plan is to ship 60,000 t/yr of e-methane from an existing LNG export terminal in Australia. The synthetic methane is to be produced from carbon-free hydrogen and CO2 that is captured from local factories and natural gas liquefaction plants, Osaka Gas added.
The companies will look into things like procurement of renewable energy and CO2, as well as a location for the facility, from April, aiming for a basic design of the project in 2024, an investment decision in 2025 and eventually exports to start in 2030.
The firms completed a feasibility study of the project in the April 2022-March 2023 fiscal year. This followed an agreement between Osaka Gas' Australian subsidiary Osaka Gas Australia and Santos to study producing and exporting e-methane to Japan and other countries.
Osaka Gas has also been working with Tallgrass Energy and Green Plains to produce e-methane in the US. The three firms aim to produce up to 200,000 t/yr of synthetic methane by 2030 and export it to Japan from the US' 15mn t/yr Freeport LNG export terminal using existing facilities.
Osaka Gas has also been working with rival Japanese gas distributors Tokyo Gas and Toho Gas, as well as Japanese trading house Mitsubishi, to produce and export synthetic methane from existing facilities at the 15mn t/yr Cameron LNG terminal.

