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European Energy Markets
1JUN

Germany cannot inject at this price

4 min read
08:52UTC

EU storage cleared 37.0% on Friday 22 May at 0.17 pp/day, while German CCGT marginal cost stood at EUR 129/MWh against a EUR 106.35 day-ahead clear; France's 100% mandatory contract fill is the only thing holding the headline.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Storage lands below 80% by 1 November unless Germany's clean spark recovers or Berlin reinstates a fill instrument.

Gas Infrastructure Europe's AGSI+ platform recorded EU aggregate gas storage at 37.0% on Friday 22 May, up 0.7 percentage points on the 17 May print of 36.3% and 4.0 pp on the 33.06% reading on Saturday 2 May 1. The seven-day injection pace sits at 0.17 pp/day against the 0.53 pp/day required to reach 80% by 1 November, leaving an 18.0 pp deficit versus the five-year seasonal norm.

Germany's carbon stack, not cargo procurement, drives the deficit. With TTF at EUR 47/MWh and EUA allowances at EUR 75/t, a 0.52 t CO2 per MWh CCGT plant carries roughly EUR 39 of carbon plus EUR 90 of gas, putting marginal cost near EUR 129/MWh against German day-ahead clearing at EUR 106.35/MWh on Thursday 21 May. Clean spark spread inverted, German operators have no commercial trade that lifts summer molecules into caverns at the prevailing near-flat summer-winter strip; the curve does not fund carry. Bruegel's three-scenario refill model priced the bill at EUR 26-44bn across the EUR 45-75 TTF band, with EUR 26bn operative at EUR 45/MWh; that range is now a cost estimate for a landing below 80%, not at it.

Against that, France carries the EU aggregate; storage capacity sits 100% booked under regulated mandatory contracts at zero reserve cost, supplying the EU-aggregate cover that masks the German gap on the headline; 37.0% is materially above the April trough of 28.92% and Berlin's Bundesnetzagentur is still calling supply stable with its early-warning gas stage active since July 2025. The harder read is that Germany abolished its storage levy on 1 January 2026 with no replacement instrument, stripping the cost-recovery mechanism that underwrote injection economics through three winters between TTF prints of EUR 25 and EUR 70/MWh. A second formal cut to the 80% target needs Council unanimity not currently available, leaving silent acceptance of a sub-80% landing as the operative posture into the 11 June joint ACER/EC workshop.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

European countries store gas underground in summer to use in winter. Right now, EU storage tanks are only 37% full, and they are filling at roughly a third of the speed needed to reach the 80% safety target by November. The main reason Germany - Europe's largest storage market - is not injecting more gas is that gas-fired power plants there are losing money at current prices. Gas plus the cost of carbon pollution permits pushes their costs to around EUR 129 per megawatt-hour, but the wholesale electricity price is only EUR 106. No commercial operator will buy gas to inject when the economics run backwards like that.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Germany's CCGT marginal cost at EUR 47 TTF and EUR 75/t EUA sits at approximately EUR 129/MWh. At EUR 52/MWh thermal efficiency, a 0.52 t CO2/MWh CCGT pays roughly EUR 39/MWh in carbon plus EUR 90/MWh in gas. German day-ahead cleared EUR 106.35/MWh on 21 May, 23 EUR/MWh below that marginal cost.

No cavern operator can fund summer-molecule carry when the instrument that prices the filled cavern's output - winter day-ahead - fails to cover the cost of acquiring the molecule in summer. The carbon stack is the binding constraint: at EUR 50 TTF and EUR 75/t EUA, CCGT marginal cost stays near EUR 129/MWh regardless of gas procurement strategy.

France's 100% mandatory booking covers the EU aggregate headline but does so at zero reserve cost: French operators are required by CRE regulation to hold capacity, not to inject molecules. The aggregate 37.0% therefore masks a two-speed market: France at mandated saturation, Germany at commercial zero. The structural divergence will not close unless Germany either reinstates a fill instrument or the summer-winter strip widens enough to fund carry at EUR 47+ TTF.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    EU aggregate storage lands at 55-65% on 1 November at the current 0.17 pp/day pace, creating a winter supply gap that TTF cannot price without a 30%+ prompt rally.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Sub-80% landing makes the Council unanimity needed to formally revise the EU storage regulation politically unavoidable, surfacing the first formal revision of the Gas Storage Regulation since its July 2022 adoption.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    A summer-winter strip widening of EUR 15+/MWh above current levels would unlock commercial injection without a regulatory instrument; any Hormuz reopening signal that breaks TTF below EUR 43 compresses the strip further and eliminates the carry trade for the season.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #11 · Germany cannot inject at this price

euenergy.live· 22 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Germany cannot inject at this price
The injection deficit is now a market-design problem inside Germany's own electricity stack, not a procurement problem; a sub-80% landing on 1 November is the operative consensus.
Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
TTF failing to sustain EUR 47-plus with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian supply offline confirms EUR 50 as a diplomatic ceiling rather than a physical floor; the curve is priced as a Troll-restart long, not a storage-deficit short. Winter Cal-26 long versus summer TTF short is the structural position FNB Gas's broken-mechanism verdict supports.
European Commission and DG Energy
European Commission and DG Energy
The Commission lowered the mandatory fill target from 90% to 80% and published the 11 May ETS benchmark revision saving industry EUR 4 billion, choosing industrial competitiveness over storage ambition at the moment physical injection margins narrowed. Berlin's confirmation of no summer injection scheme came with no Commission counter-instrument.
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungary and Slovakia pay a EUR 2-plus delivered-gas premium over TTF benchmark prices regardless of ACER's improved pipeline-congestion reading, and both are litigating the 17 June EU pipeline ban at the CJEU (ID:3229). A post-17 June tightening of TurkStream supply would widen that basis further.
EBN and Dutch state
EBN and Dutch state
The Dutch state trebled EBN's mandate from 25 to 80 TWh, leaving EBN the sole active Dutch injector after the January auctions drew zero commercial bookings (ID:3637). The EUR 233m state budget cap is the binding cost ceiling; above-market injection at EBN is a fiscal transfer, not a market outcome.
CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
France's 100% mandatory CRE booking order is carrying French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing EU aggregate cover that Germany's abolished levy cannot supply. The order renews annually on CRE decision, making it a political risk rather than a structural guarantee.
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas formally declared the market-based storage-refill framework broken on 27 May, citing zero-clearing January auctions, ten days after Berlin ruled out any summer injection scheme. The intervention sets the institutional predicate for reintroducing a storage levy; the Gasspeicherumlage precedent (2022-25) confirms the administrative path is open.