Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Energy Markets
4JUN

EU storage 32%, refill pace below target

5 min read
10:45UTC

Bruegel's Week 17 dataset put EU aggregate storage at 32% on 28 April, but the required injection rate to hit 80% by 1 November is roughly 0.25 percentage points per day, and the post-ban week tracked below that pace.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

Refill cost is on track at current TTF; the daily volume pace is not.

Bruegel's Week 17 European Natural Gas Imports dataset, published Tuesday 28 April, put EU aggregate gas storage at 32% of capacity, up from 31.47% on 25 April 1. The Brussels think tank's calculation puts the required injection pace to reach the 80% target by 1 November at roughly 0.25 percentage points per day. The post-ban week has tracked below that rate.

For the November target, the deficit compounds. At 0.25 pp/day, the bloc needs to add about 1.75 percentage points per week; the late-April rate has been adding closer to 1.2. The half-percentage-point weekly shortfall is small in any single week and hardens by mid-summer if the pace does not lift. Germany's season-high 745 GWh/day injection on 25 April helped move the aggregate from 31.47% toward 32%, but the bloc-wide pace remains below the trajectory. Three deterministic supply removals (the EU short-term ban on Russian LNG contracts, the Arc7 maintenance ban now stacked on it, and Equinor's Hammerfest LNG outage at and are the supply-side context against which the daily injection rate has to perform.

Within the EU figure, the Netherlands sits at 8.95% as of 25 April , more than fifteen percentage points below any other major market. GTS, the Dutch gas TSO, published the 2026/2027 security-of-supply overview confirming the 115 TWh cold-year target and the EBN (Energie Beheer Nederland, the Dutch state energy holding) state-backstop mandate of up to 80 TWh, against 25 TWh the prior summer 2. The bulk of that mandate runs through Bergermeer, the Netherlands' largest storage facility, which held only 15 TWh of its 46 TWh capacity at end-January 2026. GTS has confirmed Bergermeer, Grijpskerk and Norg as required strategic assets through 2031.

Bruegel separately flagged that European reverse gas flows to Ukraine "dropped sharply" in the same dataset, a directional signal absent from wire reporting. Through 2024-25, reverse flows had been a persistent feature of EU-Ukraine balancing under the trans-Balkan corridor and Slovak interconnector arrangements. A sharp drop in late April could reflect Ukraine's domestic injection priority taking over export commitments, or shippers preferring European storage over Ukrainian. The OIES has not yet weighed in. Against Bruegel's three-scenario refill model showing EUR 26 billion of refill cost at EUR 45/MWh TTF , the bill arithmetic holds. The volume arithmetic is the bind, and the GTS Q2-Q3 Bergermeer injection schedule against the 80 TWh EBN mandate is the next operational test.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Europe needs to fill its underground gas storage to 80 percent capacity by 1 November to have a safe buffer for next winter. As of late April it stands at 32 percent. To get from 32 to 80 in time, the EU needs to inject gas at a rate of about 0.25 percentage points per day. In the week after the Russian LNG ban took effect, the actual rate was running below that target. The Netherlands is the biggest concern: its main storage site, Bergermeer, held only a third of its maximum capacity in January. The Dutch state has committed to filling it, but the shortfall is large and the injection season has only just begun.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EU storage regulation revised the mandatory filling target downward from 90% to 80% by 1 November in April 2026, citing the supply disruption from the Hormuz closure. The revised target implies a daily injection requirement of approximately 0.25 pp/day from the late-April baseline.

Three independent supply removals are compressing the injection rate simultaneously: Hammerfest LNG offline since 22 April with extension risk; Hormuz carrying only fractional LNG volumes versus the pre-war baseline of three loaded carriers per day; and the Russian LNG spot ban removing 2.8-3.5 million tonnes per year of short-term supply.

The Netherlands' 8.95% fill rate on 25 April, more than 15pp below any other major EU market, is the system-level liability. Bergermeer's 46 TWh design capacity with only 15 TWh held at end-January means EBN must inject 65-80 TWh through Bergermeer over summer; a rate that makes Dutch injection price-insensitive and a structural tightening force on TTF spot.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    An injection pace sustained below 0.25 pp/day through May widens the storage gap by roughly 1-1.5 pp per fortnight, adding material cost to the Bruegel EUR 26 billion refill estimate and pushing autumn TTF forwards higher.

  • Consequence

    Bergermeer's EBN state-backstop mandate; price-insensitive injection of up to 80 TWh; acts as a structural demand floor on TTF during the injection season, preventing the spot market from clearing at the levels that would normally attract maximum commercial injection.

First Reported In

Update #6 · REMIT II live; storage instrument absent

Bruegel· 29 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
EU storage 32%, refill pace below target
The storage volume arithmetic, not the cost arithmetic, is now the bind, with the Netherlands deepest in deficit and reverse flows to Ukraine dropping in the same dataset.
Different Perspectives
TTF traders / Amsterdam hub desks
TTF traders / Amsterdam hub desks
TTF broke its 38-session EUR 46-47 band on 2 June to EUR 48.9 on stalled Iran diplomacy and an unconfirmed Troll A restart; Dutch EBN mandates carry storage trajectory while commercial injection books nothing. The 17 June pipeline expiry is the next binary level: Central European hub premium above EUR 2/MWh widens sharply on any physical step-down.
Red Electrica / Spanish grid operators
Red Electrica / Spanish grid operators
Spain logged 397 negative-price hours in Q1 2026, eight times the 48 hours of Q1 2025, documenting midday solar surplus now embedding structurally into Continental pricing. Spain is four to six quarters ahead of France and Germany on the solar-penetration curve, making it the clearest forward indicator of where Continental midday clearing is heading.
Equinor
Equinor
Equinor issued no Troll A restart notice through 4 June despite extending the combined outage to 31 May, keeping up to 51 mcm/day of Norwegian supply offline alongside Hammerfest LNG dark since 22 April. The company's silence follows its 2025 Hammerfest pattern, which ran 24 days past target, and each day without a notice sustains the TTF supply premium.
European Commission / GMTF
European Commission / GMTF
SWD(2026)147 found EU gas spot and derivatives markets functioning well on 2 June, recommending MiFID-REMIT legislative alignment rather than emergency intervention. The GMTF verdict addressed derivatives-market integrity, not the physical injection mechanism FNB Gas declared broken five days earlier: the Commission's immediate next step is a legislative proposal, not an emergency storage order.
FNB Gas / Bundesnetzagentur
FNB Gas / Bundesnetzagentur
FNB Gas declared the storage-refill mechanism broken on 27 May after zero bookings in January 2026 auctions, and German day-ahead cleared EUR 102.64 on 3 June on a CCGT stack set by TTF near EUR 49 plus EUA near EUR 78. Winter storage fill now depends on state mandates with no commercial self-correction.
EDF / French government
EDF / French government
EDF held full-year nuclear guidance at 350-370 TWh after April output of 29.3 TWh, anchoring the surplus that collapsed French day-ahead to EUR 8.96 on 3 June and passed that price to VNU industrials. Flamanville-3's September overhaul removes 1.6 GW at heating-season onset, reversing the nuclear surplus that made VNU pricing competitive.