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European Energy Markets
29MAY

TTF holds EUR 46-47 range; NBP reaches parity

3 min read
09:05UTC

TTF front-month range-traded EUR 46-47/MWh on 28 May while NBP settled at 112.3p/therm, equivalent to roughly EUR 46.5/MWh, eliminating the UK's historical LNG-import discount.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

NBP-TTF parity eliminates the UK's historical discount and removes a structural relief valve for Continental gas supply.

TTF front-month traded in a EUR 46-47/MWh range on Wednesday 28 May, with intraday prints at EUR 46.93 (up 0.75%) and EUR 46.02 (down 3.38% session-on-session). The one-month price change stands at +0.15%, confirming the market is range-trading between diplomatic signals rather than trending. The EUR 50 diplomatic ceiling established when a US-Iran deal headline knocked 8.1% off the benchmark remains intact despite more than 50 mcm/day of verified Norwegian outages.

The price action confirms Timera's framing : the strip is a Troll-restart long, not a supply-disruption trade. TTF failing to sustain EUR 47+ with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian capacity offline tells desks that the market is pricing restart, not sustained loss.

NBP settled at 112.3p/therm on 28 May, equivalent to roughly EUR 46.5/MWh at prevailing FX. That is effective parity with TTF. Historically NBP has traded at a persistent discount, reflecting the UK's superior regasification capacity through South Hook, Dragon LNG and Isle of Grain. At parity, UK regasification capacity no longer offers a discount to attract marginal cargoes. South Hook alone handles roughly 20% of UK gas supply; losing the NBP discount that routed cargoes there removes a buffer that Continental buyers have relied on since 2011. For LNG procurement desks, parity eliminates any routing-cost incentive to send flexible cargoes preferentially to UK terminals over Continental ones.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

TTF and NBP are the wholesale gas price benchmarks for Continental Europe and the UK respectively, similar to how Brent crude is used for oil. For years the UK paid slightly less for gas than Continental Europe because it has good LNG import terminals and can receive cargoes from many global sources. That discount has now disappeared: UK gas costs the same as European gas. This matters because gas prices set the marginal cost of electricity generation in most of Europe. When TTF and NBP converge, UK electricity bills track Continental electricity costs rather than benefiting from a structural discount.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

NBP-TTF convergence reflects two structural changes: the BBL interconnector capacity halving to 22 mcm/day in December 2024, and the IUK (Interconnector UK) capacity reduction to 36 mcm/day from 1 October 2026, cutting Continental-to-GB import capacity from 17% to 12% of UK demand. These reduce the UK's ability to draw supplementary gas from Continental surplus, forcing domestic LNG terminals to clear UK demand without arbitrage relief from the Continent.

The JKM-TTF spread at approximately USD 2.30/MMBtu still favours Asian buyers at the margin, meaning flexible Atlantic LNG cargoes are not routing to Europe; the UK and Continental markets are competing for the same limited inbound cargo flow rather than drawing from a shared surplus.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The structural NBP-TTF convergence means the UK cannot use its LNG import infrastructure as a buffer for Continental supply shocks; every future European supply disruption will now transmit to UK prices at near-full parity rather than the historical 5-10% discount.

  • Risk

    The TTF EUR 50 diplomatic ceiling will break to the upside if the Iran negotiation collapses and Hormuz closure duration extends beyond the IEA mid-year base case, removing the geopolitical price cap and allowing physical fundamentals to drive price formation above EUR 55/MWh.

First Reported In

Update #13 · Storage on track by 45 GWh; one outage away

IndexBox / Carbon Pulse / Reuters· 29 May 2026
Read original
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.