February 16, 2009 Monday
Updated
Feb 16, 2009
Russia's Pacific gas project

YUZHNO-SAKHALINSK (Russia) - Russia on Wednesday is set to begin production of liquefied natural gas (LNG) on Sakhalin Island, greatly increasing its role as an energy exporter in the Asia-Pacific region.

Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev are to attend the opening of an LNG plant - the first of its kind in Russia - which will supply markets in Japan, South Korea and the United States.

Mr Aso's visit underlines the importance of the project for Japan, which is highly dependent on Middle Eastern energy sources and is now turning to its oil- and gas-rich neighbour to the north.

It is the first visit to Sakhalin by a Japanese prime minister since World War II, when Japan controlled the southern part of the island. Hundreds of thousands of Japanese were evacuated after the Soviets took Sakhalin in 1945. Sakhalin is also near four small islands at the centre of a long-running territorial dispute that has prevented Russia and Japan from signing a peace treaty to formally end World War II.

The launch of the LNG plant establishes Russia as a major energy exporter to Asia as well as Europe, said Jonathan Stern, director of gas programmes at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. 'What it does is to make them a player in the LNG business in the Pacific, and that is a big deal for the future given how much gas there is in the Pacific that they've got,' Mr Stern said.

The plant is expected to produce 9.8 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas per year, or about four percent of the world's total LNG supply, according to Sakhalin Energy, the consortium behind the project. Around 65 per cent of the plant's production will go to Japan with the rest roughly split between South Korea and the United States, the company says.

Its opening marks the culmination of Sakhalin-2, a US$20 billion (S$30 billion) oil and gas project that has been led by Russian state-run energy giant Gazprom ever since a controversial change of ownership in 2007.

Gazprom acquired 50 per cent plus one share in Sakhalin-2 after the Russian government in 2006 accused its developer, then led by British-Dutch oil major Shell, of massive environmental abuses and revoked its permit. -- AFP

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