QatarEnergy secures long-term LNG supply deal with Japan's JERA as demand surges

  • Pact strengthens Qatar's position in Japanese LNG market
  • JERA diversifies supply to meet demand from data centers, AI

QatarEnergy, one of the world's biggest LNG suppliers, signed a deal on Tuesday with Japan's top power generator JERA to supply 3 MMtpy of LNG for 27 yrs from 2028, further strengthening Qatar's position in the Japanese market.

The agreement, made on the sidelines of the LNG2026 conference in Doha, would bolster QatarEnergy's position in Japan as competition intensifies from U.S. suppliers and Gulf rivals United Arab Emirates and Oman, which offer more flexible terms.

It follows months of talks between the two firms. The talks were first reports in May 2025 (learn more).

The agreement "strengthens Japan’s energy security by deepening our partnership with Qatar and diversifying supply sources through a greater weighting of the Middle East in our LNG portfolio, and comes in line with Japan’s energy policy," JERA said in a statement.

JERA said the LNG volumes, delivered at destination, will support gas-fired power generation and help meet rising electricity demand driven by new data centers and semiconductor plants.

Japan’s exports from Qatar fell over the past decade. Qatar has dominated the Japanese market in the past and was among the latter's top three LNG suppliers a decade ago, shipping over 15 MMtpy–16 MMtpy to Japan between 2012 and 2014. In 2025, Qatari LNG exports to Japan stood at 3.59 MMt.

Japan's exports declined over the past decade as buyers have preferred supplies from the U.S., the UAE and Oman, which offer shorter contracts and fewer destination restrictions.

JERA, Japan's biggest buyer of LNG, has been working on diversifying its supply sources to meet demand growth spurred by data centers and AI. Handling between 30 metric MMtpy–35 metric MMtpy of LNG , JERA sources nearly half of this from countries including Australia, Malaysia and Indonesia.

In June, it agreed to new supply deals undefined for U.S. LNG from four projects to diversify its global portfolio away from Australia. While Australia and Asia currently make up more than half of JERA's LNG portfolio, the recent deals are expected to raise the U.S. share to 30% by the early 2030s, from 10% now.

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