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European Energy Markets
10JUL

EU refill surges once the heat breaks

2 min read
10:05UTC

EU net injection jumped to 3,721 GWh/day on 27 June after the late-June heat broke, lifting aggregate fill to 48.62% and clearing the November-floor pace by 29%.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

EU injection rebounded to 3,721 GWh/day post-heat, running 29% above the pace November storage targets need.

Across the bloc, EU net injection jumped to 3,721 GWh/day on 27 June once the late-June heat broke, with gross injection at 3,924 GWh/day against just 203.6 GWh/day of withdrawal 1. Aggregate fill rose from 47.97% to 48.62% over two gas days, a pace of 0.32 points per day.

The readings come from GIE AGSI+, the EU gas storage transparency platform every trading desk watches for daily fill. They settle the question Left hanging after the late-June heat: did cooling demand burn through enough gas to dent the refill path? The dip never came. Net injection sagged only around 25 to 26 June, then reversed hard as temperatures eased.

Fill read 47.4% in the 26 June briefing ; the sessions since have added more than a point. Injections had been running 16% below last year as recently as 22 June, widening the year-on-year deficit to nine points . The 27 June surge is the first stretch this month to beat that comparison rather than trail it, running 29% above the 2,889 GWh/day pace the November floor requires 2.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When temperatures are very high, people use more air conditioning, which means power stations burn more gas to generate electricity. That gas has to come from somewhere, and it competes with the gas that operators want to put into underground storage for winter. During the late-June heat wave, storage companies had to share their gas supply with power stations, so daily injection volumes fell to the legal minimum required by EU rules. Once the heat eased on 27 June, power stations stopped needing as much gas and storage operators could buy freely again. The result was the biggest single daily injection rate of the late-June period: 3,721 gigawatt-hours, roughly 29% above the daily amount needed to reach the EU's 80% winter fill target. However, Europe still needs about 354 terawatt-hours of gas before November, and a large portion of that depends on tanker ships arriving from the Persian Gulf, whose routes were disrupted by tensions in late June.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The late-June heat wave of 24-27 June competed with EU injection for the same prompt molecules by lifting gas-for-cooling electricity demand into peak generation hours . CCGT gas demand effectively displaced a share of the non-mandate injection slot, holding the EU net pace at 2,889 GWh/day, the statutory minimum. When temperatures normalised on 27 June, CCGT demand retreated from around-the-clock to peak-hour-only dispatch, releasing the off-peak prompt supply back to injection.

The three mandated operators (EBN, CRE, ARERA) had maintained their statutory pace throughout the heat event, establishing the floor. Germany's commercial injection, which had been held back by the EUR 47-52 spring prices through May and early June but had resumed on the EUR 40-44 prompt after 17 June , added the above-floor volume that lifted the aggregate reading from 2,889 GWh/day to 3,721 GWh/day.

The surge was not a structural step-change but the simultaneous release of two suppressed injection channels: the heat demand that had crowded commercial operators, and the high spring prices that had crowded them before that.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The 3,721 GWh/day rebound demonstrates that the EU 80%-floor mandate successfully defended the injection pace through the heat event, with the three mandated operators maintaining the floor even as commercial injection stalled.

  • Risk

    Gazprom's projection that EU fill may not reach 70% before the heating season remains the downside scenario if heat events recur in July-August and the year-on-year nine-point deficit cannot be closed at current injection rates.

First Reported In

Update #22 · Germany refills as the autumn cliff nears

GIE AGSI+· 30 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
EU carbon and storage regulators
EU carbon and storage regulators
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Equinor
Equinor
Equinor returned its Asgard field from maintenance on 11 July, lifting Gassco's exit nominations to 319.8 mcm/day just as TTF round-tripped on Hormuz risk. The restart gave Norway spare pipeline capacity to help Europe absorb the gas rally without drawing down storage, reinforcing its role as the post-2022 swing supplier.
Germany
Germany
Germany briefly became the cheaper leg of the FR-DE spread on 12 July as French reactors went offline, while its own storage injection tripled to 723 GWh on 11 July under the EU's mandatory fill rule. Berlin's CCGT fleet absorbed the extra load at a time when EUA's climb past EUR 81 is raising its own marginal cost too.
EDF
EDF
EDF took Chooz, Golfech and Bugey fully offline on 12 July under river-cooling discharge limits, then secured a temperature exemption for Bugey to 20 July rather than wait for the rivers to cool. The government's willingness to relax the environmental ceiling shows French grid security now outweighs the permit breach when reactor hardware itself is undamaged.
Storage and injection-pace desk
Storage and injection-pace desk
EU storage sat at 51.1% on 8 July, still running below the pace needed for an 80% November target, and the JKM-TTF Asia premium of roughly USD 1.4-2.4/MMBtu was already pulling marginal cargoes east before Qatar's withdrawal compounded the gap. October's top-up remains the binding constraint, not this week's price level.
EDF / France
EDF / France
EDF added Chooz to its heat-curtailment watch list as a precaution against the second heat dome peaking 9-14 July, alongside standing warnings at Blayais, Bugey, Golfech and Saint-Alban. No output cut has been confirmed at any site as of 10 July.