Japanese
Buyers Line Up for U.S. Shale Gas
Loss
of Nuclear Power Plants, Cheap Prices Bring Investors; Will
Department of Energy Approve Exports Over Objections?
WSJ,
26
April, 2012
Japan's
energy crisis is creating opportunity for U.S companies like Sempra
Energy SRE +0.47% .
San
Diego-based Sempra was facing a $5 billion or more tab to build a
Louisiana plant to export natural gas. Then last month, two Japanese
companies joined the project and agreed to pay part of the bill, with
a French company footing some of the expense, too. Sempra says it
anticipates reaping around $300 million a year in profits from the
plant, while shedding much of the investment risk.
It
is one example of how the U.S. energy industry, drawing on plentiful
supplies of natural gas from newly developed shale-rock formations,
is beginning to gain from a world-wide thirst for natural
gas—particularly in Japan. Earlier this month, Japan shut down the
last of its 50 nuclear reactors, switching off a power source that
once produced 30% of the nation's electricity. Even if some reactors
eventually restart, demand for natural gas to fire power plants is
likely to remain strong for years in Japan, which imports almost all
the natural gas it uses.
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