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Japan’s Chubu, BP eye CO2 storage in Indonesia

  • Market: Emissions
  • 12/09/23

Japanese power utility Chubu Electric Power and BP have joint forces to explore the possibility of developing a carbon capture and storage (CCS) value chain between Japan and Indonesia.

The main objective is to export CO2 from Japan and store it in Tangguh, Indonesia.

Chubu signed an initial agreement on 11 September with BP Berau, which operates the 7.6mn t/yr Tangguh LNG venture offshore west Papua. The companies will research the feasibility of capturing, accumulating and liquefying CO2 at Nagoya port in central Japan. The study will also explore transporting CO2 to the injection and storage hub in Tangguh.

BP has previously worked on the front-end engineering design for a carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) project in Tangguh, receiving approval from the Indonesian government in 2021. The storage site is estimated to be able to accommodate 1.8bn t of CO2, according to Chubu.

Chubu and BP intend to determine the project's approximate costs by March 2024, although the timeline for a final investment decision remains uncertain. The companies are considering the possibility of commencing commercial operations around 2030, in line with Tokyo's CCS roadmap. The project may also generate carbon credits in the future.

This collaboration builds on a partnership established in February, when Chubu and BP committed to exploring decarbonisation opportunities in Japan and the wider Asian region. It included a feasibility study for a CCUS value chain connecting Nagoya port to storage sites, potentially overseas. Both companies aim to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

Nagoya is Japan's biggest port by cargo volume and located near steel, automotive, aircraft, machine and manufacturing plants, Chuba said. The port aims to reduce its CO2 emissions by 46pc by the April 2030-March 2031 fiscal year against 2013-14 levels, as industries around the port account for 3pc of Japan's total emissions, the company added.

Japanese companies have intensified their efforts to develop CCS and CCUS projects and are actively seeking international partnerships. This is driven by Japan's reliance on fossil fuels to ensure energy security and foster economic growth, which necessitates exporting CO2 because of limited domestic storage sites.

Separately, Australian independent Woodside Energy has made an agreement with Japanese companies — Sumitomo, Toho Gas, K-Line, and Kansai Electric Power — to explore opportunities to develop CCS value chains between Japan and Australia.


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