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European Energy Markets
1JUN

June injections trail last year by 16%

4 min read
08:52UTC

EU storage injected 6.9 bcm in June, down 16% on last year, widening the year-on-year fill deficit to about 9 points as power generation bids for the same prompt cargoes the mandated injectors need.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Europe's storage gap is widening on observed data, not narrowing on forecast.

EU storage injected 6.9 bcm in June, down 16% on the same month last year and about 6% below the multi-year pace for the date, on GIE AGSI+ data relayed by TASS 1. AGSI+ is the daily transparency platform run by Gas Infrastructure Europe; it is the reference the whole desk prices off. Fill reached 46.4% on 22 June against 55.4% a year earlier, so the year-on-year deficit widened to roughly 9 percentage points , .

The bloc needs 68 bcm more through October to clear the 80% target. At the April-June run-rate of around 9.3 bcm a month, the four remaining injection months deliver about 37 bcm, for a season total near 57 bcm, some 11 bcm short. This is not a forecast that might soften; it is a gap that grew inside the window.

The deficit persisted even as the front-month sat near its floor, because the mandated injectors (EBN, the Dutch state operator, CRE in France and ARERA in Italy) are bidding for the same prompt cargoes that power generation now wants. When the spark turned positive , commercial burn out-competed the only structural injection discipline the bloc has left.

Gazprom now forecasts EU storage may not even reach 70% before the heating season 2. The Russian producer has an interest in talking the deficit up, but its number lands close to the independent reading the curve is already pricing, so the warning carries weight it would not normally earn.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Europe fills its underground gas tanks over the summer so there is enough gas to heat homes and run factories through winter. The target is 80% full by 1 November. Right now, the tanks are 46.4% full; and this year the filling is going slower than last year by about 16%. Think of it like a road trip where you need 80 litres of fuel at your destination but you have only 37 litres in the tank so far, and you are filling up more slowly than you planned. You need to fill at a faster rate for the rest of the journey, but the petrol stations are mostly sending their supply somewhere else. The somewhere else is Asia, where gas prices are higher than in Europe right now, so cargo ships carrying liquefied natural gas are sailing east rather than west. Europe's filling problem will not fix itself at current prices; prices need to rise enough to make it worthwhile for those ships to change course.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural causes converge on the 16% year-on-year injection shortfall. First, the summer-winter TTF strip has been inverted throughout 2026: prompt gas trades above winter delivery, removing any commercial incentive to inject beyond regulatory mandates. Without the strip turning normal (summer cheaper than winter), only state-mandated operators inject at scale.

Second, the LNG replacement for Qatari volumes has not materialised. The JKM-TTF arbitrage, which stood above USD 5/MMBtu in mid-June, continues to pull Atlantic-basin cargoes toward Asia. The OIES 2.1 bcm/month net shortfall figure directly reflects the non-arrival of these cargoes.

Third, the gas storage levy abolition in Germany from 1 January 2026 removed the fiscal mechanism that previously supplemented market-rate injection. Germany is the EU's largest storage holder; its injection shortfall carries disproportionate weight in the bloc-wide figure.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    At the April-June run-rate, the EU closes the season roughly 11 bcm short of the 80% floor, placing November storage near 65-67%; historically associated with Q1 price spikes above EUR 80/MWh.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    A Gazprom forecast of sub-70% storage, if it prompts early demand-side measures from member states, would raise industrial energy costs and compress output in energy-intensive sectors before winter demand peaks.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    If TTF rises to EUR 58-62/MWh in July, the JKM-TTF spread closes enough to redirect several Atlantic-basin cargoes, potentially adding 3-4 bcm of incremental July injection.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #20 · Spark spread now feeds the winter deficit

TASS· 22 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
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LNG spreads desk
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German power desk
German power desk
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Equinor
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