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Japan’s ‘world first’ to extract frozen seabed gas

27th Mar 2013 | Energy

Japan says it has successfully extracted natural gas from frozen methane hydrate off its central coast, in a world first.

Other countries including Canada, the US and China have been looking into ways of exploiting methane hydrate deposits as well.  Pilot experiments in recent years, using methane hydrates found under land ice, have shown that methane can be extracted from the deposits. Offshore deposits present a potentially enormous source of methane but also some environmental concern, because the underwater geology containing them is unstable in many places.

Production tests for the new gas field

The gas field has been found about 50km away from Japan’s main island, in the Nankai Trough. This contains methane hydrates, or clathrates, which are a type of frozen “cage” of molecules of methane and water.  A survey of the gas field is being run by state-owned Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC). Engineers used a depressurisation method that turns methane hydrate into methane gas. Production tests are expected to continue for about two weeks.

Government officials have said that they aim to establish methane hydrate production technologies for practical use within five years. A Japanese study estimated that at least 1.1tn cubic metres of methane hydrate exist in offshore deposits. This is the equivalent of more than a decade of Japan’s gas consumption.

Japan has few natural resources and the cost of importing fuel has increased after a backlash against nuclear power following the Fukushima nuclear disaster two years ago.

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