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European Energy Markets
13APR

EU injects 1.9 bcm matching 2025 pace at $300m premium

3 min read
22:33UTC

EU aggregate gas injection over the first two weeks of April reached 1.9 bcm, matching the prior-year pace rather than accelerating, at a cost at least $300 million above the equivalent 2025 window.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Matching last year's injection pace at $300m higher cost does not close a target that has risen by 6 bcm.

EU aggregate gas injection reached 1.9 bcm across the opening fortnight of April 2026, matching the prior-year pace rather than accelerating, at a cost of at least $300 million above the 2025 equivalent window 1. The reference baseline is the 29.55% bloc-wide storage reading on 13 April published via GIE AGSI+, the Aggregated Gas Storage Inventory platform run by Gas Infrastructure Europe.

The aggregate line on AGSI+ is running on peripheral injection while Germany's anchor estate withdraws . That is a composition effect worth naming: the headline pace looks like continuity with last year, but the countries doing the injecting are not the same. When the largest storage estate in the bloc is net-withdrawing in April, other member states have to compensate or the aggregate slips. The match therefore means peripheral operators are already running hotter than their 2025 equivalents to keep the top-line steady.

The cost differential confirms the price environment has structurally shifted. A $300m premium on 1.9 bcm implies per-therm injection economics that no commercial operator would voluntarily run without downstream offtake certainty. It is consistent with VNG AG's public position that injection is uneconomical at prevailing spreads and with the 21 Mmcm booking rate at Reden. The 29.55% starting baseline carries forward every day the anchor does not flip.

The Oxford Institute for Energy Studies has quantified the forward requirement at 6 bcm above last summer's injection , a step-up in the May-June injection rate that the current pace does not close. The ENTSOG regasification envelope, roughly 145 bcm per winter season, is the hard physical limit on any supplementary route to cover a shortfall if the German anchor stays in withdrawal. A holding line works only when the target has not moved, and the target has moved.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Europe injected about 1.9 billion cubic metres of gas into storage during the first two weeks of April 2026 the same rate as last year. That sounds reassuring, but it is not enough, because Europe needs to inject more gas than last year to make up for the fact that storage started 6 percentage points lower. Matching last year's pace when you need to exceed it is like running the same speed as last year in a race where the finish line has moved further away. The injection is also costing more: roughly $300 million extra compared to the same period in 2025.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EU injection shortfall is structurally rooted in two converging failures: the composition of the supply mix has shifted toward LNG precisely as the two largest LNG supply sources (Qatari Hormuz cargoes and Norwegian Hammerfest output) are simultaneously absent from the European supply chain.

The matching-pace problem compounds a second structural cause: the abolition of the gas storage levy on 1 January 2026 removed the commercial incentive that previously made marginal injection economical for operators whose storage-cost economics are marginal at EUR 40-42/MWh.

When the incentive was present, operators injected through thin spreads because the levy covered the gap. Without it, they do not. The 1.9 bcm figure is therefore the injection rate the market delivers without policy support, not the rate the system needs.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Matching 2025 injection pace locks in the 6 percentage-point starting deficit rather than closing it, absent an acceleration in May and June.

  • Risk

    Any upward TTF move in the 22-29 April supply-shock window will tighten commercial injection margins and potentially trigger further pace deceleration.

First Reported In

Update #3 · TTF holds six-week low as supply stack hardens

ENTSOG· 17 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
EU injects 1.9 bcm matching 2025 pace at $300m premium
Matching pace at a higher cost does not close the six-point deficit to last summer's starting level; it locks it in against a tighter OIES shortfall target.
Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
TTF failing to sustain EUR 47+ with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian capacity offline confirms EUR 50 as a diplomatic ceiling; the curve is a Troll-restart long, and EBN's EUR 233 million mandate budget cap is a known limit on price-insensitive prompt buying.
ARERA
ARERA
Italy's energy regulator is running mandatory storage injection that carries the EU aggregate trajectory alongside CRE and EBN, while Italian industrial consumers at Panigaglia face a simultaneously low-utilisation terminal and a EUR 2/MWh delivered-cost basis above TTF. The mandate funds security of supply at the expense of Italian competitiveness.
Shell
Shell
As a long-term Russian LNG contract holder, Shell faces a replacement procurement problem concentrated in Q3-Q4 2026 ahead of the 1 January 2027 double cliff; with terminal booking lead times running weeks, the real deadline is late November 2026 and no replacement supply has been publicly named.
CRE
CRE
France's 100% mandatory booking order funds injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing the EU aggregate cover that Germany's abolished levy cannot; the CRE order is renewed annually, making it a political risk rather than a structural guarantee. That dependency exposes the EU injection trajectory to French electoral cycles.
Bundesnetzagentur
Bundesnetzagentur
Germany's regulator holds the early-warning gas stage active with no statutory instrument to compel commercial injection, and Berlin confirmed on 20 May it will introduce no summer incentive scheme; Germany is the EU's only major unincentivised storage market after the levy lapsed on 1 January 2026. The mandate gap is carried by three other member states.
European Commission
European Commission
The Commission relaxed the mandatory fill target from 90% to 80% and published an ETS benchmark revision saving industry EUR 4 billion, choosing industrial competitiveness over both climate and storage ambition at the moment physical margins are tightest. Both decisions reduce policy pressure at the exact week the trajectory margin narrowed to 45 GWh/day.