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Japan’s Yatsushiro biomass plant starts operations

  • : Biomass, Electricity
  • 24/06/17

The 75MW Yatsushiro biomass power plant in south Japan's Kumamoto prefecture started commercial operations on 16 June.

Yatsushiro is planning to generate around 480 GWh/yr and sell the electricity under Japan's feed-in-tariff scheme for 20 years. It burns 240,000 t/yr of wood pellets mainly imported from southeast Asia, including Vietnam, and 60,000 t/yr of wood chips that are domestically produced.

The power plant was built by Japan's engineering firm IHI, which began construction in April 2022. IHI will also carry out regular maintenance and inspections.

Chubu Electric Power own 49pc of Yatsushiro, along with 37pc held by Toho Gas and 14pc by energy joint venture Ene-Vision. Ene-Vision is 56.5pc owned by Japanese trading house Toyota Tsusho, 26.1pc by domestic farm machine and industrial engine manufacturer Yanmar, 8.7pc by engineering services firm Toyotsu Machinery and 8.7pc by Toho Gas.

Another two biomass power plants are scheduled to become on line in Japan this summer, with Renova's 75MW Omaezaki venture in Shizuoka in July and the 50MW Ozu project in Ehime of Japanese upstream firm Japex and its partners in August.


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25/07/07

Multilateralism should steer climate finance: Brics

Multilateralism should steer climate finance: Brics

Sao Paulo, 7 July (Argus) — Developed countries must fully engage in climate finance to support developing countries trying to meet Paris agreement goals, top Brazilian officials said at the Brics summit held in Rio de Janeiro on 6-7 July. "One decade after the Paris agreement, [the world] lacks resources for a fair and planned transition," Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said. "Developing countries will be the most affected by losses and damages, while they are also the ones that have fewer ways to fund mitigation and adaptation," Lula da Silva said during his keynote address Monday. The Brics summit discussed climate finance in anticipation of the UN Cop 30 climate summit , which will be also be held Brazil, in November. The group issued a declaration that reinforced its commitment to uphold multilateralism as a solution for climate actions, while it also emphasized developed countries' responsibility towards developing countries to financially enable just transition pathways and sustainable development aligned with the Paris agreement. The Cop 29 summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, in November 2024 managed to reach an agreement to allocate $300bn/yr in resources for climate action. But delegates to the upcoming UN Cop 30 summit are targeting at least $1.3bn/yr in public and private funds to tackle climate change, focusing especially on countries that are already dealing with extreme weather conditions and lack financial resources to mitigate it. The Brics also announced a memorandum of understanding on the Brics Carbon Markets Partnership focused on capacity building and multinational cooperation to support climate strategies such as mitigation efforts and emergency resource mobilization. The declaration opposes unilateral protectionist measures, arguing that they "deliberately disrupt the global supply and production chains and distort competition." Climate justice, the fight against desertification, strengthened climate diplomacy and subsidies to environmental services were the main topics of discussion during the Brics summit, Brazil's environment minister Marina Silva said. Brazil will launch its own initiatives to promote climate finance in Cop 30. One program already launched is the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) fund that aims to raise $125bn to preserve 1bn hectares of global tropical forests across 80 developing countries. Brics' development bank NDB will target 40pc of its investments to promote sustainable development, such as energy transition. The bank has approved $40bn in investments for clean energy, environment protection and water supply, it said last week. Brazil accounts for $6.4bn of total investments, gathering resources to 29 projects under climate actions, according to the institution. Brazil currently holds the presidency of the Brics, which also includes Russia, China, India and South Africa. Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE, Ethiopia, Indonesia and Iran are also members. Belarus, Bolivia, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Cuba, Uganda, Malaysia, Nigeria, Vietnam and Uzbekistan act as partner nations. Heated speech During his keynote address, Lula criticized the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as an institution that promotes unilateralism and stressed his support for reforming institutions of the UN to promote multilateralism and political equity for developing countries. He also mentioned that 65 of the biggest banks in the world committed to a $869bn investment to the fossil fuels sector last year. "Market incentives run contrary to sustainability," he said. By João Curi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US to lay out tariff demands in coming days: Trump


25/07/04
25/07/04

US to lay out tariff demands in coming days: Trump

London, 4 July (Argus) — The US will lay out its tariff demands on foreign trade partners in the coming days, President Donald Trump said today. From tomorrow, 5 July, Trump will send letters to 10-12 countries a day, with the aim that all countries will be "fully covered" by 9 July, Trump said. That rate will not cover the amount of tariff deals still to be done by the US, which to date has struck three deals — of 10pc with the UK and China and of 20pc with Vietnam. "[The tariffs will] range in value from maybe 60pc or 70pc tariffs to 10pc and 20pc tariffs," Trump said. Countries will start paying them on 1 August, he said. Since 5 April Washington has been charging a 10pc extra tariff on imports — energy commodities and critical minerals are exceptions — from nearly every foreign trade partner, and those rates could go higher after 9 July. Trump has justified those tariffs by citing an economic emergency caused by allegedly unfair trade practices in foreign countries, and his administration is engaged in talks with foreign governments with the nominal goal of lowering their trade barriers. By Haik Gugarats and Ben Winkley Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

IRA rollback to boost US natural gas demand


25/07/03
25/07/03

IRA rollback to boost US natural gas demand

New York, 3 July (Argus) — Cuts to renewable energy tax credits in the budget bill backed by President Donald Trump will likely increase demand for natural gas this decade to generate electricity, as those tax credits would otherwise subsidize the build-out of competing renewable generation infrastructure, according to analysts and industry insiders. Under the landmark bill, which was passed Thursday by the House after clearing the Senate on Tuesday, wind and solar projects only qualify for the clean energy tax credits in former president Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act if they begin construction within the next 12 months or are placed into service by the end of 2027. The accelerated timelines for renewable energy infrastructure "will likely slow the growth of renewable capacity," said FactSet senior energy analyst Trevor Fugita. "The legislation is likely to shift the focus from new renewable generation to new natural gas-fired generation, especially as AI data centers drive energy demand higher," he said. Toby Rice, chief executive of EQT, the second-largest US gas producer by volume, in an interview with Argus last week said the bill's effort at "slowing down some renewables could easily add another 1.5-2 Bcf/d" of US gas demand by 2030, especially as coal-fired power plants retire. "If solar and wind investments decrease, that [power] demand is not going away," said Rice, who identified the rollback of clean energy tax credits as key to the investment thesis for his company, alongside surging power demand for data centers and manufacturing and declining associated gas supply amid weak oil prices. EQT expects to produce 6-6.3 Bcf/d of natural gas equivalent this year. Under a previous House-passed version of Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill that required wind and solar projects to enter service by the end of 2027 to be eligible for IRA tax credits, Energy Aspects projected utility-scale solar installations falling from 32.9 GW in 2024 to 27.5 GW in 2027 and 20 GW by 2029. With the Senate's revised bill offering developers a "safer deadline" of alternatively securing the credits by beginning construction within 12 months of the bill's passage, the consultancy now expects a less steep downward trend through 2029, Energy Aspects head of North American power and emissions Michael Lawn told Argus . But utility-scale solar installations would have been on an upward trend through the end of the decade in the absence of the IRA rollback. Jason Grumet, chief executive of the trade group American Clean Power Association, on Tuesday lamented the Senate-passed bill's "very aggressive" 12-month phase out of clean energy tax credits, calling the bill "a step backward for American energy policy." By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU CBAM export plan only partial solution: Industry


25/07/03
25/07/03

EU CBAM export plan only partial solution: Industry

Brussels, 3 July (Argus) — Industry has continued to urge a more comprehensive export adjustment under the EU carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) following the European Commission's announcement of a forthcoming proposal yesterday, with some calling for full free emissions trading system (ETS) allocations for production destined for exports. Norwegian fertilizer firm Yara said the CBAM solution is "not good enough". The commission yesterday announced plans to reduce the risk of carbon leakage for goods exported from the EU in CBAM sectors under proposals to be presented by the end of the year, with the aim of providing equal treatment for all goods, whether produced, sold in the EU, or imported and exported. The commission's stated plans are "not good enough" for Monica Andres, Yara's executive vice-president for Europe. "We need a watertight and timely CBAM implementation to level the playing field with more carbon-intensive imports," Andres added, noting the commission's new proposal does not offer sufficient predictability and leads to an "incomplete" CBAM applying from 1 January 2026. "We would have preferred a solution which maintains full free allocations for the part of the production destined for exports," said BusinessEurope director general Markus Beyrer, adding CBAM is "untested and still incomplete" in its design. European steel association Eurofer said the commission's announcement on CBAM exports lacks the actual legal proposal and details on its design. CBAM sectors had proposed a simple mechanism based on free allocation for exports, Eurofer said, noting a "very limited" impact in reversing industrial decarbonisation given the proposed EU greenhouse gas reduction target of 90pc by 2040 against 1990 levels. Refinery industry association FuelsEurope has similarly called for any CBAM changes to maintain sufficient levels of free carbon allowance allocations and include measures to protect exports, if the measure's scope is extended to the refining sector. The scope of the mechanism so far includes cement, iron and steel, aluminium, fertilisers, electricity and hydrogen. The commission is consulting until 26 August on extending CBAM's scope to some downstream products and on circumvention risks. EU states and the European Parliament recently agreed to CBAM revisions exempting some 90pc of originally covered EU companies from reporting obligations. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia’s Licella aims for SAF project FID in 2026


25/07/03
25/07/03

Australia’s Licella aims for SAF project FID in 2026

Sydney, 3 July (Argus) — Australian technology developer Licella is aiming for a final investment design (FID) in the second half of 2026 for its proposed 60mn litres/yr (l/yr) biorefinery at the Isis sugar mill, 265km north of Queensland's state capital Brisbane. Project Swift has engaged contractors for engineering and site investigations after winning an A$8mn ($5.3mn) federal grant last year , a process expected to take 18–24 months and including detailed initial engineering ahead of an FID. The firm plans to use its own its Cat-HTR hydrothermal liquefaction technology for turning sugarcane waste, known as bagasse, into about 40mn l/yr of sustainable aviation fuel and other products. Licella has welcomed the Queensland government's recent announcement of a parliamentary inquiry into using sugarcane products for biofuel projects , saying clear, enabling policy will be needed to bring investment and opportunity to the state at scale. Queensland's biofuel output is largely produced by Singapore-listed Wilmar's Sarina biorefinery, which can make 60mn l/yr of ethanol using about 220,000 t/yr of molasses from the region's sugar mills. About two thirds of this is used in vehicle fuel, Wilmar has said. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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