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Japan LNG purchasers stock up after sharp stock drawdown

Japanese buyers of melted gas (LNG) are renewing inventories after greater power need throughout a cold March resulted in a sharp drawdown in stocks, and ahead of the yearly spike in electrical energy use to beat the summertime heat.

LNG stockpiles held by significant utilities in Japan, the biggest importer after China, fell to 1.48 million metric loads on March 31, according to Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry data, 36% lower than the 2.33 million heaps a year earlier and about a third below the five-year average from 2018-2022.

JERA, Japan's most significant utility and its top buyer of the super-chilled fuel, stocked up on numerous LNG freights for shipments in April and May, while other importers likewise provided buy tenders, market sources said.

JERA did not right away respond to a request for remark.

There was a flurry of Japanese buying for April-May delivery and some have actually also asked for June-July in the previous few weeks, stated Joachim Moxon, senior LNG expert at ICIS.

3 or 4 power energies that are restocking stocks are likewise opting for area purchases over term supply volumes now that spot costs have actually eased, stated Rystad Energy senior expert Masanori Odaka, including that some energies are issuing tenders to stock up for June ahead of summertime.

Asian spot LNG costs << LNG-AS > have actually relieved 18% because the start of the year and are presently down a quarter from early April last year. For some importers, area costs are lower than their oil-linked long-term agreement rates.

LNG stocks are also still listed below last year's 2.5-3 million load levels in June, the start of Japan's summertime season.

We anticipate Japanese LNG need to increase by 1.1 million loads, or 4%, year-on-year over summer season due to energy need normalisation, said Min Na, head of Asia LNG at Energy Aspects, describing the April to September period.

In 2015, the Japanese federal government gotten in touch with families and industries around Tokyo to save electricity in July and August to make sure steady power supply throughout the peak summertime season.

Threat of further hold-ups to restarting the Shimane system 2 and Onagawa unit 2 nuclear power plants, expected in August and September respectively, might also enhance LNG need, Na said, noting that both had seen several delays.

For each month these 2 units are delayed, Japanese LNG demand would be improved by around 2 LNG cargoes, Na stated.

(source: Reuters)