City
Epaper

Japan to release oil reserves to reduce prices

By IANS | Updated: November 24, 2021 15:25 IST

Tokyo, Nov 24 Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Wednesday that the country will release oil, which ...

Open in App

Tokyo, Nov 24 Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Wednesday that the country will release oil, which would be the first time for the resource-poor country, to try reducing prices by tapping reserves.

"Japan has decided to act in tandem with the United States and sell a portion of the state-owned stockpiles in a manner that does not violate the oil stockpiling law," said Kishida.

The oil stockpiling law limits the release to purposes such as responding to disasters and overseas political turmoil, reports Xinhua news agency.

In order not to violate the law, Tokyo plans to release oil reserves that exceed its target of storage in value of 160 days of consumption. The amount of oil to be initially released is expected to be equivalent to consumption in several days, according to a government official.

The White House announced on Tuesday that the US will release 50 million barrels of oil from its emergency reserves in coordination with other major energy-consuming countries to address rising prices. Some other countries are also expected to take similar actions.

However, oil prices continued to rise in New York overnight and in Tokyo, with doubts appearing about the effectiveness of the move as the amount of oil to be released is only worth several days of consumption.

In Japan, the decision to develop reserves in the past was to solve supply problems after natural disasters and overseas political turmoil.

So far, the country has implemented five releases, including after the Gulf War in the early 1990s and the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

As a member of the International Energy Agency, Japan is obliged to maintain oil reserves equivalent to 90 days of net imports in the previous year, and the amount of private emergency reserves should exceed 70 days of its oil consumption in the previous year, according to the Japanese law.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: japanXinhuaTokyoWhite HouseFumio kishidaKishida fumio
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalCalifornia Becomes World's Fourth-Largest Economy, Surpassing Japan

International'Ramadan Mubarak': US President Donald Trump Attends Iftar Dinner at White House (Watch Video)

InternationalPM Modi’s US Visit: President Trump Shows Respect by Pulling Out Chair for Indian PM at White House Meeting; Video Surfaces (Watch)

InternationalWashington DC Plane Crash: American Airlines Plane Collides With Black Hawk Helicopter Midair at Ronald Reagan National Airport (Watch Video)

InternationalPM Narendra Modi Likely To Visit White House in February, Says US President Donald Trump

Politics Realted Stories

Maharashtra'Unity Not Just for Elections': MNS Leader Sandeep Deshpande on Possible Thackeray Alliance

PoliticsMurshidabad Violence: Shehzad Poonawalla Slams Yusuf Pathan Over Tea Post, Says, “As Hindus Get Slaughtered…”

PoliticsTamil Nadu Assembly Elections 2026: BJP-AIADMK Join Hands, Palaniswami To Lead Alliance, Says Amit Shah

Politics‘No Injustice to Muslims’: Shiv Sena Leader Manisha Kayande Slams Opponents of Waqf Amendment Bill

NationalParliament Passes Waqf Amendment Bill: Two JDU Leaders Resign Over Party's Support