Monday, June 22, 2026

About LNG and LPG

 Is LNG always refrigerated?

Yes, Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) must always be kept at cryogenic, refrigerated temperatures to remain a liquid. [1, 2]
Because natural gas is primarily composed of methane, it has a critical temperature of -82.6°C (-116.7°F). Above this temperature, methane cannot exist as a liquid, no matter how much pressure is applied. To maintain its liquid state and keep its volume shrunk by 600 times, LNG is strictly stored and transported at approximately -162°C (-260°F). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
How LNG Stays Cold (Without Active Refrigeration)
While LNG must always be refrigerated, it does not always require a mechanical refrigerator (like a kitchen freezer) while it is being stored or shipped. Instead, the industry relies on two primary mechanisms: [1, 3, 4]
  • Extreme Insulation: LNG is held in massive, double-walled tanks with high-grade vacuum or powder insulation that drastically slows down heat from entering the tank. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • Autorefrigeration: LNG is stored as a "boiling cryogen". Just like boiling water stays at exactly 100°C because evaporating steam carries heat away, LNG stays at a constant -162°C because a tiny amount of the liquid is allowed to evaporate into Boil-Off Gas (BOG). [1, 2, 4, 5]
What Happens to the Boil-Off Gas?
Because tanks cannot simply vent natural gas into the atmosphere for environmental and safety reasons, the BOG must be managed: [, 2]
  1. Fuel Source: On⁠LNG carrier ships, the boiled-off gas is captured and piped directly to the ship's engines to power the vessel.
  2. Reliquefaction: On modern ships or at large land-based ⁠LNG terminals, active mechanical refrigeration units compress and re-cool the BOG, turning it back into a liquid and pumping it back into the tank. [1, 2]
LNG vs. LPG (A Common Confusion)
People frequently confuse LNG with LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas, which is propane and butane). [1]
  • LPG can be liquefied simply by applying moderate pressure at normal room temperatures (like a backyard grill propane tank).
  • LNG cannot be kept at room temperature using pressure; if you seal it in a tank without refrigeration or BOG venting, the pressure will skyrocket until the tank ruptures. [1, 2, 4, 5]

About the Nord Stream Pipeline

 What are the chances of repairing the Nord Stream pipeline from Russia to Europe?

The physical chances of repairing the Nord Stream pipelines are high, as technicians agree it is entirely feasible technically, but the political chances of a full restoration and reactivation remain very low due to strict European opposition and sanctions. [1, 2]
While technical experts maintain that the infrastructure can be fixed, the project remains deadlocked by political, legal, and financial bottlenecks. [1, 2]
The Technical Feasibility (High)
  • Estimated Timeline: A joint memorandum by technical experts filed in the London High Court concluded that a hypothetical repair project would take about 36 months. This includes pipeline design, licensing, purchasing materials, and mobilizing specialized pipe-laying contractors. [1]
  • Estimated Cost: Experts and insurers estimate the cost of repairing the ruptured lines to be between $500 million and $700 million. [1, 2]
  • Preservation Efforts: To prevent total ruin from internal oxygenated seawater corrosion, the Danish Energy Agency permitted Nord Stream 2 AG to conduct preservation work to install customized plugs at the open pipe ends. [1]
  • The Intact Line: Of the four total strings (two for Nord Stream 1 and two for Nord Stream 2), one string of Nord Stream 2 remains physically intact and undamaged from the September 2022 sabotage, meaning it requires no repair to function. [1, 2, 3]
The Political & Geopolitical Hurdles (Very Low)
  • German Opposition: Germany has stated it will do "everything in its power" to ensure the pipelines are not brought back into service. Chancellor Friedrich Merz supports ongoing EU plans to permanently prevent the reactivation of the pipelines as part of sanctions packages against Russia. [1, 2]
  • EU Phase-Out Goals: The European Commission is actively consulting member states on a permanent ban on the Nord Stream network. The EU remains committed to completely eliminating its reliance on Russian fossil fuels by 2027. [1, 2, 3]
  • The U.S. "Peace Deal" Wildcard: Rumors and reports have surfaced regarding backchannel discussions between U.S. and Russian officials regarding the pipeline. American investor Stephen P. Lynch has actively sought to buy the Swiss-based Nord Stream 2 AG (a subsidiary of Russia's Gazprom). Under a speculative post-sanctions "peace deal," U.S. investors would take a controlling stake to bypass European objections, though European nations strongly oppose handing Russia a major financial lifeline. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7]
  • Legal and Bankruptcy Blocks: Nord Stream AG and its subsidiaries face complex bankruptcy negotiations and massive outstanding debt deadlines. Western energy backers (such as Shell) insist that Gazprom must resolve multi-billion dollar arbitration lawsuits over unilateral gas cuts before any practical discussions of a revival can begin. [1, 3]

Strategy is more important than tactics

 Who said "Our strategy is 1 against 10 and our tactics are 10   against 1"

The quote "Our strategy is 1 against 10 and our tactics are 10 against 1" was coined by the Chinese revolutionary and military strategist Mao Zedong. [1, 2, 3]
He frequently used this maxim to explain the principles of protracted warfare and guerrilla strategy. The core concept emphasizes overcoming a numerically superior enemy by taking them on in smaller, fractional engagements: [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Strategy (1 against 10): Acknowledging that the enemy has an overwhelming advantage in overall size and resources.
  • Tactics (10 against 1): Ensuring that in every single, specific battle or skirmish, you bring a concentrated, overwhelming local force to guarantee victory. [1, 2, 3, 4]



Sunday, June 21, 2026

About Japan's Postal Savings

 Is Japan's Postal Savings still one of the world's largest sovereign wealth funds?

No, Japan’s Postal Savings (now Japan Post Bank) is not, and has never been, a sovereign wealth fund (SWF). While it is one of the largest financial institutions on Earth, managing roughly $1.57 trillion to $2.03 trillion in total assets, by global financial convention it is classified as a commercial/retail deposit-taking bank and financial holding company—not an SWF. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Key Distinctions and Status
1. Why it is not a Sovereign Wealth Fund
  • Source of Capital: Sovereign wealth funds are state-owned investment vehicles funded by a nation's foreign exchange reserves, budgetary surpluses, or commodity export revenues (like Norway's oil fund or China's trade-surplus funds). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • Liability Structure: Japan Post Bank is funded by private retail customer deposits held in roughly 120 million individual accounts. It owes this money directly back to its savers on demand, meaning its assets are offset by massive consumer deposit liabilities. [1, 2, 3, 4]
2. Institutional Type
  • Financial Holding Company: The Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute (SWFI) ranks Japan Post as a Financial Holding Company / Bank, placing it alongside institutions like Barclays rather than true SWFs like Norway's Norges Bank Investment Management. [1, 2, 3]
  • Privatization Status: Under the Postal Service Privatization Act, the parent company, Japan Post Holdings, has been progressively selling off its stake. The government's ownership has dropped significantly, and it holds under 50% of Japan Post Bank shares, transitioning it further into the private commercial sector. [1]
3. Where Japan’s True Sovereign Capital Sits
If you are looking for Japan's massive state-backed investment giants, they belong to different categories:
  • Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF): Often conflated with an SWF, this is a public pension fund. Managing $1.6 trillion, it was recently overtaken by Norway as the world's largest asset owner. [1, 2]
  • Fiscal Investment and Loan Fund (FILF): Historically funded by redeposited postal savings to build national infrastructure, this $1.13 trillion pool is classified as a Government Fund rather than a standard commercial wealth vehicle. [1, 2]
  • The "Hidden" SWF: Some economists note that the Bank of Japan and the Ministry of Finance run a massive, leveraged currency carry-trade via Japan's $1.2+ trillion foreign exchange reserves, functionally operating like a synthetic sovereign wealth fund. [1, 2]