Skip to content
Foundations rebuilt, and the first new thing is here: search across every topic, entity, and event.Try search
European Energy Markets
11JUN

German storage deficit deepest in EU

3 min read
09:04UTC

Bundesnetzagentur data reveals a structural asymmetry: Germany can draw gas twice as fast as it can inject it.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Germany's injection ceiling of 4.3 TWh per day makes late starts to refilling irrecoverable.

Bundesnetzagentur data showed Germany's gas storage at 23.32% (57.6 TWh) on 12 April, the steepest national deficit in the EU. Daily injection capacity stands at only 4.3 TWh against 7.0 TWh withdrawal capacity, a structural asymmetry that limits how fast reserves can rebuild regardless of supply availability.

The Bundeswirtschaftsministerium (federal economics ministry) activated its early warning stage (Fruhwarnstufe) last summer and has not lifted it since. Germany's 247 TWh storage estate is the EU's largest, and at current fill levels the country holds roughly two months of average winter consumption. Reaching The Commission's revised target by November requires injecting approximately 140 TWh in seven months, an average daily rate of roughly 0.67 TWh; that is achievable within the 4.3 TWh ceiling, but leaves no margin for supply disruptions or late-season cold snaps.

The injection asymmetry is the structural constraint traders are watching. A late start to refilling, whether from continued high TTF prices discouraging early buying or from LNG supply tightness through May, cannot be recovered by faster injection later. The pipeline only flows so fast.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Germany has more underground gas storage space than any other EU country. Think of it as the EU's biggest reserve tank. But right now that tank is only about a quarter full. The problem is the refill speed, which matters as much as the volume gap. Its pumping infrastructure can only push in 4.3 TWh of gas per day, while it can pull out 7.0 TWh per day in an emergency. This mismatch means filling up takes a long time, and there is not much room for anything to go wrong before the next winter.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Germany's below-average storage position reflects three compounding factors. The Uniper Rehden salt cavern complex, restructured following Uniper's 2022 nationalisation and subsequent sale, operated at reduced injection capacity in 2025 after post-nationalisation capex constraints delayed compressor upgrades.

Second, Germany ceased Russian pipeline gas imports in September 2022 but did not replace the equivalent flexible baseload with LNG regasification capacity until the FSRU fleet expansion of 2023-24. The resulting two-year gap in flexible supply left German operators more dependent on storage drawdown as a balancing tool.

Third, the Bundeswirtschaftsministerium's early warning stage, active since July 2025, imposes mandatory reporting but not mandatory injection targets, meaning commercially rational operators have had discretion to defer injections while spot prices remained above forward contract levels.

Escalation

The early warning stage (Fruhwarnstufe) is the lowest of Germany's three crisis levels. If storage falls below 25% during the injection season rather than rising, the Bundesnetzagentur has authority to escalate to the alert level (Alarmstufe), triggering compulsory injection obligations and demand-side reporting requirements for large users.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If German injection rates run below 3.5 TWh/day through May, the Bundesnetzagentur will need to issue a formal deficit trajectory warning under EU Gas Regulation 2017/1938.

  • Consequence

    German industrial gas consumers face mandatory reporting obligations under the active early warning stage, increasing administrative costs and creating competitive disadvantages versus non-EU producers.

First Reported In

Update #1 · Europe's thinnest gas cushion since 2018

Bundesnetzagentur / news.de· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
TTF failing to fall with three bearish physical signals on 11 June confirms EUR 50 as a diplomatic ceiling rather than a physical floor; the Iran escalation premium of roughly EUR 2-3/MWh is the sole bid not corroborated by a molecule. Winter Cal-26 long against summer TTF short is the structural position FNB Gas's broken-mechanism verdict supports.
German capacity planners and industrial buyers
German capacity planners and industrial buyers
The cabinet-approved StromVKG entering Bundestag is a direct acknowledgement that EUR 124/MWh day-ahead power and a EUR -8 spark spread make Germany's grid unfinanceable on market terms; the 2031 first-capacity date is five years of exposure before any relief arrives from the 9 GW programme.
ACER and the European Commission
ACER and the European Commission
ACER's 11 June REMIT workshop and the 12 June guidance lock signal the surveillance regime entering its first full enforcement cycle under expanded cross-border powers, with 204 STORs in 2025 already doubling the prior year before the new powers activated. The Article 207 TFEU pipeline ban framing has produced no CJEU stay, validating the trade-measure classification strategy.
LNG spot traders and cargo routers
LNG spot traders and cargo routers
The JKM-TTF arb at USD 2.368/MMBtu sits above the USD 1.80-2.00 round-trip threshold, routing Atlantic spot cargoes east with positive carry and compressing European import volumes through the injection season. At USD 2.368 the arb still points Asia comfortably; the next weekly laycan window is the operative data point.
Hungary and Slovakia
Hungary and Slovakia
Neither Budapest's February 2026 CJEU annulment challenge nor Slovakia's signalled application has produced a stay; with six days remaining the legal route has not bought the supply-protection time it was intended to. After 17 June, Hungary's long-term Gazprom-TurkStream contract to at least September 2027 becomes the sole remaining Russian pipeline import line for both states.
Hungary and Slovakia (Central European supply-security bloc)
Hungary and Slovakia (Central European supply-security bloc)
Nine days from the 17 June short-term pipeline ban, neither Hungary's February CJEU challenge nor Slovakia's signalled application has produced a stay; the legal route has not bought the supply-protection time it was intended to. After 17 June, Hungary's long-term Gazprom-TurkStream contract to 2036 becomes the sole remaining Russian pipeline import route for both states.