Bloomberg News reporter covering transportation and energy. Views are my own. RTs ≠ endorsements.

Joined December 2017
5 Photos and videos
Tsuyoshi Inajima retweeted
Japan will propose a global strategic reserve for natural gas to avoid future shortages 🇯🇵⚠️ 🤝 The government will suggest the @IEA create a gas stockpiling framework for member nations, similar to the emergency reserve for oil By @shoko_oda @Inajima17 bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Tsuyoshi Inajima retweeted
31 May 2023
In 23 years covering OPEC, this is a first. Under pressure from Saudi Arabia, OPEC has banned journalists from Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, and Bloomberg (including myself) from attending the group’s ministerial meeting in Vienna this weekend #OOTT bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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The world’s largest battery maker doesn’t need Ford Motor Co. or Tesla Inc. It’s the US — and global — carmakers, desperate to go electric quickly, that need the Chinese behemoth. @anjani_trivedi bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
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Tsuyoshi Inajima retweeted
2 Dec 2022
🇯🇵⚡️Japan is considering setting up a strategic reserve of LNG • Government will propose a plan to secure a so-called “strategic buffer LNG,” with authorities supporting local companies to buy excess supply for energy security bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Tsuyoshi Inajima retweeted
2 Dec 2022
🇯🇵 日本政府がエネルギー・金属鉱物資源機構(JOGMEC)に基金を設置し、民間企業の長期契約などを基にした液化天然ガス(LNG)調達の支援に乗り出す方針であることが分かった。 With @Inajima17 bloomberg.co.jp/news/article…
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Tsuyoshi Inajima retweeted
This is Toyota President Akio Toyoda’s unique mode of transportation right now. $TM
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Qatar's state minister for energy Saad Al-Kaabi said on Thursday it feels ``a bit strange'' to speak at a conference hosted by Japan ``at a time when Qatar is no longer a major LNG supplier to this pioneering market.''
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The Qatar minister is referring to the fact its LNG supply to Japan significantly fell after Jera Co. decided not to renew big LNG contracts with Qatar at the end of 2021.
Japan's METI significantly revised up its forecast for thermal power generation capacity that will be scrapped by fiscal 2030. It now expects 43.3GW will be scrapped. That's huge.