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Japan's JERA H1 earnings halves, complete year projection unchanged

Japan's leading power generator, JERA, said on Tuesday its AprilSeptember internet earnings halved, hit by a steep drop in gains from lagged fuel price modifications and its U.S. power generation organization.

The utility adhered to its annual earnings price quote of 200 billion yen ($ 1.3 billion), that included the impact of the shutdown of its Taketoyo coal-fired power plant following a fire on Jan. 31. No date has been set yet for rebooting the plant.

JERA, an unlisted business jointly owned by Tokyo Electric Power and Chubu Electric Power, reported internet profit of 138.9 billion yen for the six months through Sept. 30, down 52% from the year-ago duration.

The decline in revenue reflected a sharp drop in so-called time-lag gains, which diminished to 16.6 billion yen in the first-half from 215.9 billion yen a year earlier. The gains stem from delays in showing fuel rate changes in its power rates.

Nevertheless, JERA, Japan's greatest buyer of liquefied gas (LNG), said omitting the time-lag effects, its profit rose 62% to 122.2 billion yen, due to enhanced competitiveness in procuring thermal coal and LNG.

Last year, hedging against coal cost variations through derivatives backfired. But we've seen an improvement in the sector this year, JERA's executive officer, Naohiro Maekawa, told a press conference.

JERA, which satisfies around 80% of its domestic LNG demand through term contracts, buys extra fuel from the area market during peak need season in summer season and winter, while offering excess supply when need is lower.

The market circumstance and the ratio of our long-term agreements and area transactions also assisted enhance the competitiveness of LNG procurement this year, Maekawa said.

JERA's independent power producer service in The United States and Canada suffered some losses in mark-to-market worths of derivatives positions, Maekawa said, including that JERA thought about that to be a short-lived phenomenon.

(source: Reuters)