

ガスとエネルギー
概要
ガスと電力は、すべての経済活動を支える2つの不可欠なエネルギー源です。信頼できる市場情報、データ、価格へのアクセスはガスと電力セクターへのエクスポージャーに関して、より多くの情報に基づいた意思決定が可能になります。
当社の市場専門家チームは、独立した信頼できる価格査定、インデックス、市場データ、詳細な分析を提供しています。当社の価格とマーケット・インテリジェンスは、エネルギー会社、政府、銀行、規制当局、取引所、その他多くの組織で利用されています。より良い意思決定のために、これらの市場に関する当社の深い知識をご活用ください。
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Infinium takes FID on 100MW Texas e-fuels plant
Infinium takes FID on 100MW Texas e-fuels plant
London, 19 May (Argus) — US project developer Infinium has taken a final investment decision (FID) on an e-fuels production plant in Texas, and has selected compatriot Electric Hydrogen to provide 100MW of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyser capacity. Construction of Project Roadrunner, at Pecos, west Texas is underway, with commercial production due to start in 2027, Infinium said. The facility will make 23,000 t/yr of synthetic aviation fuels (e-SAF) and other e-fuels, specifically e-diesel for trucking and maritime industries and e-naphtha. This will make it the largest e-fuels facility in the world, Infinium said. Supply will be sold domestically and exported to international markets, it said. Infinium last year struck a 10-year offtake deal with UK-based International Airlines Group (IAG) for delivery of 75,000t of e-SAF to any of the group's airlines: Aer Lingus, BA, Iberia, Level and Vueling. The UK will introduce mandatory e-SAF quotas for the aviation sector from 2028, with the EU to follow suit in 2030. The 7,500 t/yr deal with IAG would cover roughly one-third of Project Roadrunner's expected output. Infinium also has a supply agreement with American Airlines, the developer said. Project Roadrunner will be fed with 150MW of wind power generation capacity from a subsidiary of Florida-headquartered NextEra Energy Resources, via a long-term power purchase agreement. Infinium said Electric Hydrogen's integrated 100MW PEM plant "will not only produce hydrogen for the e-SAF facility but will also have capacity to support future hydrogen offtake opportunities." Canadian asset management Brookfield in 2024 agreed to invest $200mn in Infinium, and specifically Project Roadrunner, in the short term, with potential further investments of $850mn for future projects. Project Roadrunner previously received conditional funding commitment of $75mn from the Bill Gates-founded Breakthrough Energy Catalyst. Infinium has not specified whether it intends to avail itself of the 45V hydrogen production tax credits, which could yield up to $3/kg of hydrogen. Start of construction would leave this possibility open even if a bill proposed by Republicans in the US House of Representatives goes through. The proposed bill foresees that tax credits would only be available for projects that start construction before the start of 2026. By Alexandra Luca Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
US LNG developers brush off tariff concerns
US LNG developers brush off tariff concerns
Houston, 19 May (Argus) — The US' biggest LNG developers have little worry over potential costs from President Donald Trump's 25pc steel and aluminum import tariffs as they prepare to spend billions building new export infrastructure. The top exporters of US LNG so far in 2025 — Cheniere, Venture Global and Sempra — are pushing ahead with plans for new terminals and expansions, dismissing concerns that Trump's protectionist trade policy could throttle projects that would help add more than 80mn t/yr (12bn cf/d) of capacity to the world's largest supplier of LNG by 2030. Sempra and Venture Global both estimate that just 1pc of capital expenditure for the first phases of their respective Port Arthur and CP2 projects is exposed to tariffs. Sempra plans to spend $13bn on the 13.5mn t/yr first phase of the Port Arthur, Texas, project. Venture Global expects to spend $27bn-28bn on both phases of the 28mn t/yr CP2 plant in Louisiana, but has yet to reach a final investment decision for phase 1. About 90pc of the Port Arthur project's spending is with domestic suppliers and contractors, Sempra chief executive Jeffrey Martin told investors in an earnings call on 8 May, with steel for the first liquefaction train fully sourced in the US. The two-train first phase is expected to have its trains on line in 2027 and 2028. Disruptions during the Covid-19 pandemic had already forced the company to identify and adapt to risks in the supply chain. "We expect those diversified sources to help us better manage and mitigate tariff risks," Sempra chief financial officer Karen Sedgwick said. She later added that the firm preemptively began importing materials for Port Arthur LNG into a foreign trade zone in February, a tactic that can reduce or delay duties payments . Neither of Venture Global's existing 12.4mn t/yr Calcasieu Pass and 27.2mn t/yr Plaquemines plants in Louisiana faces tariff risks, chief executive Mike Sabel told investors on 13 May. But up to $350mn of materials in the 20.2mn t/yr first phase of CP2 are subject to duties. The 26 prefabricated trains in phase 1 are being built in Italy and represent the largest exposure (see table) . Venture Global expects 12 of those trains to arrive in Louisiana by the end of the year. Inflation and high interest rates represent a bigger threat, Sabel said, calling it "probably the toughest environment to build our projects since the 1970s". "It's something we work and live every day because of the scale of construction we're doing," said Sabel, whose company has 73.8mn t/yr of capacity in development. Sempra expects to make a final investment decision on the 13.5mn t/yr second phase of Port Arthur LNG by the end of 2025. Venture Global is eyeing a decision on CP2's first phase by mid-2025. ‘Our best salesmen for US LNG' Cheniere, the largest LNG exporter in the US, faces no tariff risks at its 11.45mn t/yr Corpus Christi, Texas, stage 3 expansion. The seven-train project "is basically complete", chief executive Jack Fusco told investors on 8 May, with all materials on site and construction ongoing. The company expects to have the first four trains producing LNG by the end of the year and plans to reach an investment decision this year to add trains 8 and 9. The largest portion of spending for those trains will be on labor, and "a fair amount" of equipment and materials will be sourced domestically, limiting tariff exposure, Fusco said. The company has already spent $500mn in early procurement. Cheniere also plans to jump on what it sees as a friendly permitting window under the Trump administration and add about 17mn t/yr to its existing 33mn t/yr Sabine Pass plant in Louisiana. Fusco said he has been meeting with administration officials in Washington to discuss trade issues and how LNG fits in Trump's energy agenda. The first Trump administration "were some of our best salesmen for US LNG, and that's continued during the president's current administration", Fusco said. Since taking office in January, Trump's administration has worked to buttress the US LNG industry, quickly ending the Biden administration's pause on issuing licenses to export to countries that do not have free trade agreements with the US and making it easier for projects to receive extensions for such licenses. But the new projects by Cheniere, Venture Global and Sempra may benefit from having already been in at least preliminary development when Trump unveiled the metals tariffs in February. For developers in earlier phases who are just now procuring supplies, "it's a different story", Alex Whittington, director of international affairs at Cheniere, told a conference in April. By Tray Swanson Venture Global CP2 Phase 1 - Tariff Exposure Component Country of Origin Delivery Status Tariff Exposure Liquefaction trains Italy First module delivery in mid-2025 $145mn-255mn Pre-treatment modules Fabricated in US First module delivery in mid-2026 $10mn-20mn Power island components US, Europe, Vietnam Delivered, major equipment in US storage $3mn-5mn Piperack modules, structural steel and pipe Various Piperack and structural steel procured $6mn-10mn Balance of plant Various Major bulk materials procured $40mn-50mn LNG tanks Various 9pc nickel steel plate and pipe piles procured $6mn-10mn Total $210mn-350mn — Venture Global Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
EU, UK to ‘work towards’ linking carbon markets
EU, UK to ‘work towards’ linking carbon markets
London, 19 May (Argus) — The EU and UK agreed to work towards linking their respective emissions trading systems (ETS), as part of their common understanding agreement concluded at a summit in London today. "The European Commission and the United Kingdom share the view that a functioning link between carbon markets would address many of the issues raised in respect of trade and a level playing field," the agreement states. A linking agreement should exempt both jurisdictions from their respective carbon border adjustment mechanisms, according to the common understanding, and the linked systems should cover power and industrial heat generation, and domestic and international maritime and aviation emissions. The statement specifically states that any link "should not constrain the European Union and the United Kingdom from pursuing higher environmental ambition". It also underlines that the UK ETS's supply cap and its emissions reduction pathway are "guided by" the country's Climate Change Act and nationally determined contributions to the Paris climate agreement, and that these should be "at least as ambitious" as the EU's. The UK has legally binding targets to cut its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 68pc by 2030 and 81pc by 2035, both compared with 1990 levels. The EU aims to cut its net GHG emissions by 55pc by 2030, and is yet to set a 2035 target. Both jurisdictions are targeting net zero emissions by 2050, while they share the "same interests" in addressing climate change, commission president Ursula von der Leyen said today. Linking the systems would "save British businesses £800mn in EU carbon taxes", UK prime minister Keir Starmer said today, without specifying a timeframe for the savings. A study commissioned by a range of utilities and published last week found that linking the two systems would save up to €1.2bn on lower hedging costs resulting from improved market liquidity and lower bid-offer spreads. Today's agreement provides no timeline for linking the systems. The process to negotiate and link the Swiss ETS to the EU's scheme took almost 10 years. Alongside plans to work towards linking the EU and UK ETS, the jurisdictions also alluded in the agreement to continuing "technical regulatory exchanges" on energy technologies including hydrogen, carbon capture and storage and biomethane. And they will "explore in detail the necessary parameters" for the UK's potential participation in the EU's internal power market. By Victoria Hatherick and Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Australian carbon lobby urges government program reform
Australian carbon lobby urges government program reform
Sydney, 19 May (Argus) — Australia's lobby group Carbon Market Institute (CMI) urged the federal government to reform its Climate Active voluntary program, after utility Energy Australia admitted to flaws in its carbon offsetting strategy in a key legal case. The CMI said the Australian government must push reforms to the Climate Active program, and that carbon credits should not substitute decarbonisation efforts. Most of the voluntary demand for Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs) comes from the federal government-backed Climate Active , which awards certification to businesses that measure, reduce and offset their carbon emissions to achieve carbon neutrality. "Offsets do not prevent or undo the harms caused by burning fossil fuels for a customer's energy use," Energy Australia said on 19 May. The utility admitted that carbon offsetting is not the best way to help customers reduce their emissions, as a legal action launched by advocacy organisation Parents for Climate in the Federal Court of Australia in 2023 reached its conclusion. The two parties have settled, with the utility saying it has now shifted its focus to direct emissions reductions. Energy Australia in 2016 launched the ‘Go Neutral' carbon offset product, which is certified by Climate Active and provided residential customers with a way to offset emissions generated by their electricity or gas consumption. But the utility admitted their electricity or gas use was still sourced predominantly from fossil fuels. It withdrew the ‘Go Neutral' product from the market in July last year and is phasing it out for existing customers during 2025. The government has been delaying key decisions on the future of the Climate Active voluntary program , including whether to change the existing list of eligible international units or setting a minimum percentage use of ACCUs. There are currently 528 active certified brands under the Climate Active program, down from almost 590 in the end of 2024. The number of brands that stopped using the certification increased to 240, from around 180 over that same period. By susannah Cornford Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
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