
BASF
Germany's largest chemicals group; Q1 2026 EBITDA down 6% as gas costs force Verbund freeze threat.
Last refreshed: 12 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Will BASF freeze its Ludwigshafen Verbund complex if European gas prices stay above sustainable levels?
Timeline for BASF
Mentioned in: Storage hits 47.4% as heat burns gas
European Energy MarketsMentioned in: Carbon claws back its 11 May cut
European Energy MarketsOperated at 62-68% capacity utilisation and framed Verbund freeze as structural rather than contingent
European Energy Markets: Chemicals 62-68% as the new running floorMentioned in: TTF breaks band on Trump life-support line
European Energy MarketsMentioned in: Storage 35.4% met, 80% trajectory missed
European Energy MarketsHow exposed is BASF to European gas prices?
What is BASF's Cheniere LNG deal?
Why is European chemicals production at risk in 2026?
Background
BASF reported Q1 2026 EBITDA before special items of EUR 2.4bn, down 6% year-on-year, and issued a stark warning that prevailing European gas prices were unsustainable for its operations. The company flagged potential production freezes at its Verbund integrated manufacturing sites as a contingent option — the first time such a scenario had been made explicit in results guidance. The Q1 result landed against a backdrop of TTF prices ranging from EUR 43 to EUR 70/MWh since the start of 2026, driven by the Qatar Ras Laffan supply disruption and lingering geopolitical uncertainty.
BASF is Germany's largest chemical company and one of the world's largest, headquartered in Ludwigshafen. Its Verbund model — where chemical outputs feed directly into downstream processes on the same site — is the source of its cost advantage in normal markets, but makes the complex highly gas-intensive and difficult to partially curtail. Natural gas is both a feedstock and fuel for ammonia, fertilisers, plastics, and specialty chemicals; the Ludwigshafen site alone consumes roughly 3.5 TWh of gas per year. BASF had historically sourced gas under long-term contracts and through its Wintershall exploration subsidiary (since divested), but portfolio restructuring Left it more exposed to spot markets. A long-term LNG supply contract with US exporter Cheniere is due to begin in mid-2026, providing partial future hedging.
BASF's Q1 warning echoes the broader contraction sweeping European heavy industry. European chemical manufacturing capacity fell by roughly 37 million tonnes (9%) between 2022 and 2025 as sustained high gas prices permanently destroyed demand and forced plant closures at Ineos, Solvay, and peers. The company has responded by investing in energy efficiency and shifting production towards lower-cost regions, including China and the United States. A Verbund freeze at Ludwigshafen would mark a structural escalation beyond those efficiency measures and signal that even the most integrated European chemical complex cannot absorb a prolonged high-gas-price environment.