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European Energy Markets
11JUN

Netherlands fills at 13.9% on EBN alone

3 min read
09:04UTC

The Netherlands sat at 13.90% fill on 24 May, the EU's weakest major store by a wide margin, injecting only because the Dutch state lifted EBN's mandate from 25 to 80 TWh.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

EBN is the sole Dutch injector on a trebled mandate, so a Hague fiscal squeeze is the hidden tail risk.

The Netherlands held 13.90% fill on 24 May, 19.99 TWh against 143.79 TWh of capacity, the weakest major store in the bloc by a wide margin 1. The country had entered injection season at 8.95% , so the climb is real but small, and it runs entirely on one company. The Dutch state lifted EBN's strategic storage mandate from 25 TWh to 80 TWh, leaving the state firm effectively the sole active injector at roughly 400-420 GWh/day while commercial operators stayed out.

EBN is Energie Beheer Nederland, the state-owned gas company that holds subsurface rights and executes the government's strategic storage policy. With the summer-winter strip inverted, a private operator has no intrinsic reason to inject, so the Dutch market is the cleanest single-state proxy for the state-versus-market split now running under the whole bloc. EBN trebling its mandate, rather than the resulting fill print, is what carries the signal here.

That makes the Dutch leg fragile in a specific and unusual way. Where the aggregate pace looks like acceleration off the prior baseline , the mechanism here is fiscal: the EU number is only as durable as EBN's funding line. A Dutch budget squeeze, rather than a TTF retreat, is the proximate way this leg stalls, and it would stall while the strip still showed no commercial signal to replace it. EBN's mandate funding, not the curve, is what holds the single-state proxy up.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Netherlands is one of Europe's main gas storage hubs. Gas is pumped underground in summer and brought back out in winter when demand rises. Right now, Dutch underground stores are only 13.9% full, the lowest of any major European country. The reason is that a single state company, EBN (Energie Beheer Nederland), is doing almost all the filling. Commercial gas companies have stepped back because the maths do not work for them: summer gas in Europe currently costs more than winter gas, so injecting gas into storage means buying expensive gas now and selling cheaper gas later, which is a guaranteed loss. The Dutch government tripled EBN's official storage target from 25 TWh to 80 TWh (a terawatt-hour is a large unit of energy, enough to power about 100,000 homes for a year). EBN is now pumping roughly 400-420 gigawatt-hours of gas per day into storage. EBN operates under a fixed EUR 233 million mandate budget for the 2026/27 season. If EBN's EUR 233m budget runs out before August, injection could stop, leaving Dutch stores at below 50% fill going into winter.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Dutch state faces a structurally unusual storage problem created by the overlap of three events occurring at the same time.

First, GasTerra depleted Norg (59 TWh) and Grijpskerk (24 TWh) to near-zero ahead of the April 2026 NAM handover, leaving Bergermeer as the only operative Dutch storage facility. Bergermeer's total working volume is approximately 60 TWh. This concentration means EBN's injection performance determines the entire Dutch storage outcome; there is no secondary facility to compensate for any shortfall.

Second, commercial operators cannot inject against the inverted summer-winter TTF strip at Bergermeer or anywhere else. The EUR 43-50/MWh spot level in May 2026 sits above the winter 2026-27 forward, eliminating the arbitrage spread that provides commercial injection incentive. Without EBN's state mandate, Bergermeer's injection rate at current spreads would be near zero.

Third, the Netherlands' contribution to the EU's 115 TWh cold-year aggregate target is disproportionately large relative to its storage capacity. GTS's 2026/27 security-of-supply overview sets a 115 TWh combined target across three facilities, of which only Bergermeer is operational. The Dutch system is therefore the most exposed to a single-operator mandate failure of any major EU storage market.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    EBN's fixed EUR 233m mandate budget is consumed faster at EUR 47-50 TTF with a negative summer-winter spread. A budget breach before August forces either a Treasury top-up or an EBN pace reduction, removing the Netherlands' contribution to EU aggregate injection.

  • Consequence

    With Norg and Grijpskerk at structural zero, any EBN pace reduction leaves no Dutch backstop facility, amplifying the bloc-level storage shortfall relative to the 80% November target.

First Reported In

Update #12 · EU refill doubles on mandates as TTF fades

Gas Infrastructure Europe· 26 May 2026
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