Which future? Japan’s net zero vision for the region boosts gas and threatens green exports in Australia

2024-08-23T10:56:00+10:00

A Liquid Natural Gas tanker ship in Asia in sumertime
Wesley Morgan
Wesley Morgan,

Japan is splashing cash for Australian gas to keep fossil fuels flowing under its net zero plan for South East Asia . But this undercuts Australia’s green export vision.

Japan has a very clear vision of what the Asia-Pacific’s clean energy future looks like – decarbonisation, but done slowly and with a longer role for coal, oil and gas.

It was on full display this week as energy ministers from nine South-East Asian nations, Japan and Australia gathered in Jakarta to hash out a shared vision for Asia’s energy future, under Japan’s Asian Zero Emissions Community (AZEC) initiative launched .

But there’s a clear problem here. Japan’s vision clashes directly with Australia’s efforts to become a . And worse, Japanese investment is a key reason why Australia has emerged as an unlikely gas export giant.

Energy security is front of mind for Japanese policymakers worried about keeping the lights on across their import-dependent archipelago. While Tokyo does have green energy plans, its short-term push is all about prolonging the life of fossil fuels – coupled with carbon capture.

Labor came to power promising to act faster on climate change. By decade’s end, Australia should be largely run on renewables, and Canberra wants to make clean exports a reality.

But Japan is making that harder by financing gas exploitation in Australia. This could lock our fast-growing and energy-hungry region into much longer reliance on dirty fossil fuels and questionable carbon capture plans.

There’s a real danger Australia’s green export plans could be washed away by a tide of new fossil fuels.

So what are Japan’s zero emission plans?

In 2022, the Japanese Prime Minister Kishido Fumio began promoting a – efforts combining decarbonisation, economic growth and energy security. Fumio launched the Asian Zero Emissions Community to encourage the idea.

While these goals sound reasonable, the devil is in the detail. The world’s fourth-largest economy, Japan has on imported coal, oil and gas – and more so after the 2011 Fukushima disaster forced nuclear plant shutdowns. Even as the world belatedly scrambles to tackle climate change, Japanese policymakers are still focused on keeping fossil fuels flowing. Many aim to use fossil fuels for electricity.

The government’s energy policies explicitly aim to and encourage Japanese firms to be involved. Japan is now the world’s second-largest public financier of international fossil fuel projects, spending more than A$7 billion .

How does this align with net zero? Japan claims new fossil fuel plants can slash emissions by in coal plants, with fossil gas in gas plants and ramping up .

Each of these technologies is . They cannot cut emissions at . And every million spent on propping up fossil fuels is a million not spent on renewables and storage.

Japanese funding makes Australian gas flow

Japan sees Australia as a friendly nation with huge fossil fuel resources and longstanding trade links.

Any changes to coal and gas extraction have been met with Japanese lobbying. When Queensland hiked coal royalties in 2022, Japan’s ambassador to Australia, Shingo Yamagami, . The move, he warned, could have “widespread effects on Japanese investment beyond the coal industry”.

When the federal government strengthened the Safeguard Mechanism, our main industrial emissions policy, . In response, Yamagami , warning the neon lights of Tokyo would go out without Australian energy exports.

Would the lights of Tokyo go out without Australian gas?

Japan isn’t burning it all at home. It on-sells more liquefied natural gas (LNG) to other Asian nations than it . Without Japan’s funding on favourable terms, our LNG producers would with lower-cost producers such as Qatar.

Given a global gas glut is by 2026, Australia should be looking to dial down LNG. But Japan won’t let that happen.

Just this year, Japan to help Woodside develop Western Australia’s massive Scarborough gas field.

Independent and green – or dependent and dirty?

Domestically, Australia is greening. Coal is retiring as renewables and storage rush in. Last year, came from clean energy and of Australia’s total power needs should be provided by renewables by 2030. But internationally, we’re now the of carbon emissions from fossil fuels.

With major reserves of critical minerals (essential for ) and world class renewable resources, Australia is ideally placed to export green commodities to the region.

The Albanese government Australia as a “renewable energy superpower” and will invest public money through the to give local green industries a chance of global success.

But Japan has a different vision. Funding flows from Tokyo have already distorted Australia’s energy market and boosted demand for gas in the region. Worse, it has made it harder for Australian leaders to create future-focused industries. New gas projects pull investment, workers and supply-chain capacity clean energy industries.

It’s not that Japan is anti-renewable. It’s just . Tokyo has to become the world’s top producer of energy from offshore wind.

Recent modelling shows Japan 90% clean energy by 2035, gaining far greater energy independence and slashing reliance on expensive fossil fuels. If Japan took this route, we would likely see its Australian investments shift .

But right now, Japan’s focus is on keeping fossil fuels flowing.

Australia has to help shape Asia’s energy transition. If we don’t, we risk our future being made in Tokyo.The Conversation

, Research Associate, Climate Risk and Response,

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