Report: Japan’s Ethanol Blend Level Averages 1.8% in 2021
by Erin Voegele (Ethanol Producer Magazine) Fuel ethanol consumption in Japan is expected to reach 823 million liters (217.41 million gallons) in 2021, down from 850 million liters in 2020, according to a report filed with the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service’s Global Agricultural Information Network in late December.
Japan currently has an ethanol blend mandate in place of 500 million liters of crude oil equivalent in the transportation sector, which is equivalent to approximately 823.7 million liters of ethanol. The mandate is fulfilled entirely the use of ethanol to produce bio-ethyl tert-butyl ether (ETBE), which is used as a gasoline additive.
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Approximately 6 percent of bio-ETBE blended in 2020 was produced domestically with ethanol sourced from Brazil. A very small volume of bio-ETBE was made from domestically produced rice ethanol. Increased ethanol blending in 2020 combined with reduced fuel demand from the COVID-19 pandemic caused Japan’s ethanol blend rate to increase from 1.6 percent in 2019 to 1.9 percent in 2020.
As of September 2021, the report notes that imports of bio-ETBE and ethanol were on track to reach the required mandate targets, with current forecasts predicting Japan’s transportation sector will consume 823 million liters of ethanol in 2021. The ethanol blend rate is expected to average 1.8 percent in 2021.
According to the GAIN report, Japan currently has only one domestic ethanol refinery. That facility operated at 15 percent capacity in 2020 but was expected to remain idle throughout 2021.
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The report notes that as of October 2021, the U.S. had not exported ethanol directly to Japan for fuel. Direct U.S. ethanol exports are destined for industrial use and first shipped to bonded warehouses in South Korea, according to the report. As a result, substantial differences exist between U.S. export trade data and Japan’s import data for ethanol.
A full copy of the report can be downloaded from the USDA FAS GAIN website. READ MORE