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European Energy Markets
4JUN

Reuters cuts TurkStream YoY drop to 1.7%

3 min read
10:45UTC

Reuters calculations on ENTSOG data put TurkStream average April flow at 41 mcm/day, only 1.7% below April 2025. The week-old 25% drop framing collapses on inspection.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

TurkStream April at 41 mcm/day is only 1.7% below April 2025; the March 2026 surge was the anomaly.

Reuters calculations on ENTSOG (European Network of Transmission System Operators for Gas) data, relayed via Baird Maritime on Monday 4 May, put TurkStream average April flow at 41 mcm/day (million cubic metres per day) 1. The figure broadly corroborates the 40.3 mcm/day EADaily had reported on 27 April , but the framing collapses on inspection. The drop is -25.5% MoM against March 2026 and only -1.7% YoY against April 2025, 1.23 bcm versus 1.25 bcm.

March was the anomaly, not April. The March 2026 surge was front-loading ahead of the Hormuz price spike , the same pattern Bruegel identified in EU LNG terminal data for the same month . Reuters attributes the April reversion to demand and pricing effects rather than pipeline disruption. Gazprom has not published its own monthly statistics since January 2023, which is why a single-source EADaily figure was able to dominate the narrative for a week before a wire-service cross-check landed.

Two positioning points follow. TurkStream is not a new disruption stacked onto the supply book; at 1.23 bcm against 1.25 bcm a year earlier, the YoY shortfall sits well inside seasonal noise. When the only number available comes from one outlet without a wire-service cross-check, the structural reading is doing more work than the data supports, as the EADaily 25% framing showed across the prior week. Lowdown flagged that print as single-source on 27 April ; the corrective Reuters/ENTSOG frame has now landed.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

TurkStream is a gas pipeline that runs under the Black Sea from Russia to Turkey, then branches north into southeastern Europe, supplying Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria and Slovakia. A news outlet reported in late April that the pipeline's gas flow had dropped by 25% compared to the previous month, which sounded alarming. But Reuters checked the same data from the EU's official pipeline-flow network and found the drop was only 1.7% compared to the same month last year. The big month-on-month fall was because March had been unusually high, not because April was unusually low.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The narrative dominance of the EADaily 25% framing for a full week before the Reuters correction reflects a structural data quality gap: Gazprom stopped publishing monthly statistics in January 2023, removing the primary cross-check source for TurkStream throughput figures. ENTSOG publishes daily flow nominations, but interpreting those nominations as monthly volumes requires a calculation step that commodity desks perform and regional news outlets typically do not.

The gap creates a window in which a tier-3 outlet with Gazprom-adjacent sources can set the narrative frame, and the corrective wire-service read takes days to propagate across the regional media ecosystem in Hungary, Slovakia and Serbia, precisely the markets most exposed to TurkStream volume shifts.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The week-long EADaily narrative dominance before the Reuters/ENTSOG correction illustrates how data gaps from Gazprom's January 2023 reporting halt create recurring mispricing windows that wire-service corrections cannot close in real time.

  • Risk

    Q2 LNG contingency tenders filed by Bulgarian and Serbian buyers in response to the EADaily framing may not be cancelled even after the corrective read, adding speculative LNG demand to an already tight Atlantic cargo market.

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