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European Energy Markets
15JUN

FNB Gas calls refill model broken

4 min read
12:23UTC

FNB Gas told Berlin on Wednesday the storage-refill framework is broken after the January auctions for 2026-27 drew zero bookings: 5.7 TWh offered in Germany, 750 GWh in the Netherlands, not a single lot cleared.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

European storage is on track on state mandates alone; the market mechanism beneath it has stopped working.

FNB Gas, the association of Germany's gas transmission system operators, told Berlin on Wednesday 27 May that the market-based storage-refill framework is broken and that an overhaul is "absolutely essential". 1 One number carries the case. The January 2026 capacity auctions for the 2026-27 storage year drew zero bookings. Operators offered 5.7 TWh in the German market area and 750 GWh in the Dutch, and not a single lot cleared.

The inverted summer-winter strip explains the empty book. With winter on the TTF curve, the Dutch gas benchmark, trading below summer, an injector who fills now and sells the winter loses on the spread, so the intrinsic incentive to inject has gone . FNB Gas warns that the low inventories which follow raise winter-shortage risk.

The German transmission system operators, not a commentator, are pronouncing the mechanism dead, and the verdict lands ten days after Berlin confirmed it would introduce no summer injection scheme . EU storage still hit 40.1% on Monday 1 June at roughly 0.33 pp/day, above the 0.257 floor needed for 80% by November . That pace is bought by regulated demand rather than commercial arbitrage: the Dutch state's trebled EBN mandate and France's CRE booking order are carrying the trajectory , where EBN is the Dutch state energy company and CRE is France's energy regulator. The headline fill looks healthy while the mechanism beneath it has stopped functioning.

The counter-case runs that on-track storage refutes any "broken model" claim. The mandates are annual instruments renewed by political decision, not a price signal that self-corrects. Strip them out and the bookings data says the commercial market would inject almost nothing.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Gas storage works like a giant underground battery. You buy cheap summer gas, pump it underground, and sell it back in winter when it is worth more. The profit from that buy-low, sell-high trade is what convinces commercial companies to fill the caverns voluntarily. After the 2022 energy crisis, Germany introduced a storage levy to top up that incentive, because the summer-winter price gap was not always wide enough on its own. The levy lapsed on 1 January 2026. Without it, operators look at current prices and find summer gas costs the same as or more than what they can sell it for in winter, so there is no profit and they do not book storage capacity. That is why zero lots were booked in the January 2026 German auctions. FNB Gas, the body that runs Germany's high-pressure gas network, told the government on 27 May that this is not a blip; the commercial model is broken. Countries like France and Italy had regulators that kept mandatory booking orders in place and avoided the same problem. Germany let its lever expire five months before proving it needed it.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural conditions converge to produce the zero-booking outcome.

First, EU Regulation 2022/1032 (the Gas Storage Regulation) sets a 90% November fill target but relies on member states to choose the refill instrument. It imposes no obligation to maintain a levy, subsidy, or mandate once the crisis-period emergency measures lapse. Germany exercised its discretion to let the Gasspeicherumlage expire on 1 January 2026, leaving the commercial signal as the sole injection incentive in the EU's largest storage estate.

Second, the summer 2026 TTF forward strip is inverted against winter 2026-27: buying gas now to inject and selling it forward for winter delivery generates a negative spread on a mark-to-market basis. Under an inverted strip, rational operators do not inject unless subsidised or mandated.

The inversion has two drivers: an oversupplied prompt market (Troll A restored, JKM-TTF routing Atlantic cargoes east rather than into European injection), and the diplomatic-premium ceiling that confirmed EUR 50 as the top of the range rather than a physical floor.

Third, Germany's physical storage asymmetry makes the problem self-reinforcing: withdrawal capacity runs at 7.0 TWh/day against 4.3 TWh/day of injection capacity. Caverns empty faster than they fill, so the seasonal risk asymmetry is structurally biased towards under-fill. Without a compensating financial instrument, no individual operator internalises the system-wide cost of leaving storage empty.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Germany fails to legislate a replacement incentive before the April-September injection season, the EU aggregate November fill lands at 65-72% under mandate-only trajectories, materially below the 80% target and tightening winter balancing at the margin.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    FNB Gas's formal declaration that the market-based mechanism has failed sets the institutional predicate for Berlin reintroducing a storage levy or direct subsidy; the Gasspeicherumlage precedent (2022-25) confirms this path is legally and administratively available.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The mandate-only injection model (EBN, CRE, ARERA) carries a fiscal tail risk for three sovereigns: mandated injection at above-market cost is ultimately a state subsidy, and fiscal pressure on any one of the three could constrain mandate delivery mid-season.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Winter Cal-26/27 TTF long versus summer TTF short captures the inverted strip's pricing of mandate-only injection; a policy shift (levy reintroduction, EU-level incentive scheme) would reprice winter delivery and compress the basis.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #14 · Germany's TSOs call the refill model dead

Bloomberg· 1 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
Caused by
Germany fills at 0.50 pp/day, no scheme
Berlin's ruling out of any summer injection scheme on 20 May left the inverted strip as the sole commercial signal, making the zero-booking auction result inevitable and prompting FNB Gas's intervention.
Occurred 24 May 2026
Read story →
EU refill doubles on a regulated base
The EU injection pace doubling to 0.38 pp/day on EBN, CRE and ARERA mandates on 23-24 May demonstrates the mandate-only trajectory that FNB Gas is warning is structurally fragile.
Occurred 24 May 2026
Read story →
Netherlands fills at 13.9% on EBN alone
The Dutch state trebling EBN's mandate from 25 to 80 TWh is the institutional instrument that substitutes for the absent commercial injection signal FNB Gas is declaring broken.
Occurred 24 May 2026
Read story →
Carbon claws back its 11 May cut
EUA recovery to EUR 77.46 raises the carbon component of German power clearing, squeezing clean spark spreads and making the gas-fired generation doing the storage filling more expensive, compounding the broken injection economics FNB Gas described.
Occurred 28 May 2026
Read story →
ACER calls EU gas congestion normal
ACER's congestion report reframing the bottleneck as storage rather than pipeline capacity means FNB Gas's zero-booking evidence lands in a market where the structural constraint has already migrated to storage volume.
Occurred 29 May 2026
Read story →
GMTF calls EU gas markets 'functioning well'
The GMTF 'functioning well' verdict on gas derivatives markets arrived five days after FNB Gas declared the physical storage-refill mechanism broken (ID:3786), measuring orthogonal things but arriving in the same regulatory window.
Occurred 2 Jun 2026
Read story →
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