
BBL
Netherlands-to-GB offshore gas pipeline; capacity halved to 22 mcm/d, tightening GB winter supply.
Last refreshed: 27 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How does BBL's capacity cut affect GB gas supply security heading into winter 2026?
Timeline for BBL
Mentioned in: GB exports gas; Hungary clears EUR 123
European Energy MarketsOperated at halved capacity of 22 mcm/d following reduction from 40 mcm/d
European Energy Markets: BBL halved, IUK drops in October: GB-Continent link cutWhat is the BBL pipeline and where does it go?
Why has the BBL pipeline capacity been cut?
How does the BBL reduction affect UK gas prices?
Background
The Balgzand-Bacton Line (BBL) is a 235 km bi-directional subsea gas pipeline connecting Balgzand on the Dutch coast to Bacton in Norfolk, UK. Operated by BBL Company — a consortium that includes Gasunie, Fluxys and others — it was built to provide flexible gas transfer between the GB market and the Netherlands, with TTF as the price anchor on the continental side.
BBL's capacity was halved from 40 MCM/d to 22 MCM/d effective December 2024, a reduction that was already absorbing into market assumptions by the time Dutch storage hit decade-low 8.95% fill in April 2026. Combined with IUK's concurrent reduction schedule, the two main GB-Continent links are cutting winter import capacity at a moment when Dutch storage sits unusually low and EU LNG terminals are below mid-April norms.
BBL's halving reduces the bilateral flexibility that historically allowed GB to draw on TTF-priced Continental gas during demand spikes, and reduces the Dutch ability to export surplus volumes into the GB market. The combined BBL/IUK reduction cuts GB's winter Continental import share from 17% of demand to 12%.