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Japan Says It Will Take Time To Cut Use of Russian Oil

The Ukraine crisis has highlighted Japan’s partial dependence on Russian energy even as Tokyo has acted swiftly and in tandem with the G7 in instituting sanctions.


Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida Kishida said on Tuesday that all travellers from China would have to undergo Covid tests before and after arriving to cut the risk of bringing Covid into the country.
Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida Kishida said on Tuesday that all travellers from China would have to undergo Covid tests before and after arriving to cut the risk of bringing Covid into the country. Photo: Reuters.

 

Japan’s Prime Minister, Fumio Kishida, on Monday said Tokyo will take some time to wean itself off Russia oil imports following its decision on a ban along with other group of seven (G7) nations in the wake of Moscow’s special operations in Ukraine.

The G7 nations vowed on Sunday to ban Russia oil imports “in a timely and orderly fashion” to put pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin, although resource-poor Japan depends heavily on Russian fuel.

“For a country heavily dependent on energy imports, it’s a very difficult decision. But G7 coordination is most important at a time like now,” Kishida told reporters, repeating comments he made at the G7 meeting.

“As for the timing of the reduction or stoppage of (Russian) oil imports, we will consider it while gauging the actual situation,” he said. “We will take our time to take steps towards a phase-out.” He did not elaborate.

There have been no ships loading Russian oil for Japan since mid-April, according to Refinitiv data. About 1.9 million barrels were exported from Russia to Japan in April, 33% down from the same month a year ago.

 

ALSO SEE:  Asian Markets Slip as Ukraine, China Slowdown Woes Weigh

 

 

Oil Ban Underlines Policy Turn

The Ukraine crisis has highlighted Japan’s energy dependence on Russia even as Tokyo has acted swiftly and in tandem with the G7 in instituting sanctions.

The latest ban underlines a turn in Japan’s policy. Japan has said it would be difficult to immediately cut off Russian oil imports, which accounted for about 33 million barrels of Japan’s overall oil imports, or 4%, for 2021.

It has already said it will ban Russian coal imports in stages, leaving just liquefied natural gas (LNG). Japan is in a particularly tough spot since it shut down the bulk of its nuclear reactors following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster.

Russia was Japan’s fifth-biggest supplier of crude oil and LNG last year.

The Japanese government and companies own stakes in oil and LNG projects in Russia, including two on Sakhalin Island from which partners Exxon Mobil and Shell have announced they will exit.

Still, Japan’s biggest oil refiner, Eneos Holdings, has already stopped buying Russian crude, saying it would get supplies from the Middle East.

On Friday, trading firm Marubeni Corp said it wanted to withdraw from the Sakhalin-1 oil project but was keeping its stake in line with government policy.

Kishida said on Monday there was no change to the government’s policy of keeping business interests in the various Russian energy assets.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years and has a family in Bangkok.

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