Offshore Methane Hydrates in Japan: Prospects, Challenges and the Law

Constantinos Yiallourides, Roy Partain

Research output: Book/ReportOther Report

Abstract

On 19 March 2013, Japan became the first-ever country to announce successful continuous-flow production of methane gas from a solid methane hydrate layer located under the seabed in ultra-deep waters, establishing the technical feasibility of this novel natural resource and of its novel extraction technology. Methane hydrates are a unique natural resource that could provide both a tremendous amount of natural gas and freshwater. Given this abundance of methane hydrate in both permafrost and in sub-seabed sediments, scientists in Japan have begun exploring how to combust the produced natural gas from methane hydrates to produce electricity and how the greenhouse gas emissions can be re-injected back within the hydrate reservoir system. Such a system could enable the production of carbon-neutral electrical power for dryland nations. Additionally, in a hydrogen fuel era, the freshwater can be converted to steam to use in generating hydrogen from the natural gas co-produced with the water. Thus, freshwater can be produced from offshore methane hydrates with co-production of natural gas; electrical power, hydrogen fuel, and carbon capture and storage can be implemented alongside the production activities. The extraction of methane hydrates from the seabed raises questions about various risks and hazards to the environment, including the potential of seafloor destabilization, submarine mudslides, and tsunami. Many of such risks and hazards are not present with the production of traditional natural gas. The regulatory scheme that would eventually govern extraction of natural gas from methane hydrate within Japan's 200nm continental shelf and EEZ may not be robust enough to deter these risks.

This study examines the potential prospects and benefits from the commercial development of offshore methane hydrates in Japan and ascertains whether existing legal frameworks are sufficiently robust to address the foreseeable environmental risks posed by methane hydrate exploration and exploitation operations in Japan and beyond national jurisdictions.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherBritish Institute of International and Comparative Law (BIICL)
Number of pages74
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Jun 2020

Keywords

  • Methane Hydrates
  • Japan
  • Energy Policy
  • Energy Security
  • Energy Sustainability

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