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    Gazprom’s April Exports to European Union (EU)

Summary

Despite record LNG regas in Europe in April, Russian pipeline flows were marginally up on March.

by: Thierry Bros

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Natural Gas & LNG News, Europe, Premium, Corporate, Import/Export, Political, Ministries, Infrastructure, , News By Country, EU, Russia

Gazprom’s April Exports to European Union (EU)

According to Gas Infrastructure Europe , the record daily LNG regasification record was again broken early last month, with 4.1 TWh on 4 April 2019. This can be easily explained as spot Asian LNG prices were then sub $4.5/mn Btu, so even lower than Europe, which is extremely rarely seen.

With the return of the Asian premium in the second part of the month, there was some decline in LNG send-out, but a lot of LNG is still reaching Europe. Europe is the flexible market that can accommodate any volume thanks to its massive import and storage capacity.

In April Gazprom’s flows were up (+3.4%) vs last year but stable (+0.2%) vs last month. The low transit to Turkey via EU is still on-going as, since 12 February, this line has seen very little gas flowing.



In April, Ukraine transit was more used vs March (+11.6%) instead of Belarus one (-17.5%).

Following Gazprom Export's 2018 country-by-country volumes , it is interesting to see that Germany was the country that did get the most Y-o-Y increase with an added 5bn m³ (+9.5% Y-o-Y). Germany was in 2018 64% dependent on Gazprom. And this is even without Nord Stream 2.

Speaking of Nord Stream 2, Nord Stream 2 CEO Matthias Warnig wrote April 12 to European Commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, to say that if his pipeline is not eligible for a derogation from the new rules, the measure would be discriminatory against Nord Stream 2 as a Swiss investor and the EU may be breaking the international Energy Charter Treaty (ECT).

In short Russia, the ultimate owner of Nord Stream 2, and not a signatory to the ECT, is threatening to take EU to court under the ECT because the project is headquartered in Switzerland! On 17 April, Nord Stream 2 filed also an appeal against the March 26 decision of the Danish Energy Agency related to the North-western permit application requesting Nord Stream 2 to investigate and submit an environmental impact assessment.

It is not clear how all those judicial procedures will help Nord Stream 2 to be more popular with most European policy makers… Let’s now wait for an official comment from Berlin on those judicial procedures: will Germany press Denmark to grant Nord Stream 2 the remaining permit for the line to be built?

With so much LNG and pipe gas arriving in Europe, injection started early this year and storage should be full to record level ahead of next winter.

Full storage level and high regas send outs are the best options to mitigate a no-deal Ukrainian transit risk and a non-operational Nord Stream 2 that are highly probable on 1 January 2020…

Thierry Bros
6 May 2019
Advisory Board Member, Natural Gas World