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Japan’s KHI taps sustainable finance in hydrogen shift

  • Spanish Market: Emissions, Hydrogen, Oil products
  • 17/06/21

Japanese engineering firm Kawasaki Heavy Industries (KHI) will issue its first sustainability bond next month, tapping the sustainable finance market as it navigates the global energy transition and accelerates its shift towards carbon-neutral hydrogen.

KHI has decided to issue a ¥10bn ($91mn) 10-year sustainability bond next month through a public offering in the domestic bond market, targeting to finance the development of a hydrogen supply chain and an automated PCR testing robot system. KHI received a second-party opinion from Japanese rating agency R&I on the bond framework, which is aligned with the International Capital Market Association's (ICMA) green and social bond principles.

This is the first sustainability bond to be issued in Japan to directly finance hydrogen investment in line with Tokyo's plan to increase hydrogen use to 20mn t/yr by 2050 from 3mn t/yr in 2030. General contractor Obayashi issued a ¥10bn sustainability bond in 2019 to partially fund various renewable energy projects, including the research and development of a hydrogen production plant.

The planned issuance of the sustainability bond is expected to support KHI's commitment to hydrogen-related businesses, as Japan works to achieve its 2050 decarbonisation goal. KHI is planning to use part of the proceeds specifically for a demonstration project to develop and commercialise a hydrogen liquefaction unit, liquified hydrogen storage tank, liquified hydrogen carrier and loading arm system for ship-to-shore transfer of liquified hydrogen.

KHI is targeting to complete a 160,000m³ liquified hydrogen carrier in the mid-2020s, ahead of planned commercial deployment of two hydrogen carriers to supply 225,000 t/yr after 2030.

KHI is also targeting to officially commission the 1,250m³ liquified hydrogen carrier Suiso Frontier later this year, allowing its participating Japanese joint venture Hystra to start liquified hydrogen imports from Australia sometime between October 2021 and March 2022. The Hystra project includes trialling a loading arm developed in 2019 for transferring liquefied hydrogen in a joint venture between KHI, Japan's Tokyo Boeki Engineering, space agency Jaxa and the Japan Ship Technology Research Association.

Japan is seeking greater access to global sustainable investment assets, a key instrument to financing its transition to carbon neutrality. The country's Financial Services Agency (FSA) launched an expert panel on sustainable finance last December and has since been discussing policy approaches as part of efforts to turn Japan into one of the world's green finance hubs in the run-up to 2050. It is also seeking to ensure financial and capital markets channel growing domestic and foreign sustainable investment into Japanese firms, many of which have not leveraged their advanced low-carbon and decarbonising technologies.

As part of the initiatives, the FSA has co-operated with the trade and industry (Meti) and environment ministries to work out domestic guidelines on climate transition finance to help create an efficient environment for energy transition investments. Meti is working with the country's major carbon-emitting industries to draw up a decarbonisation map, which is expected to allow each sector to work out a transition strategy and enable financial institutions to judge eligibility for transition loans and bonds.


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