GasTerra depleted Norg (59 TWh of working volume) and Grijpskerk (24 TWh) ahead of the NAM (Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij) handover on 1 April, leaving both facilities at structural zero carry-in for the season. Combined with the 8.95% Netherlands fill recorded on 25 April , this leaves Bergermeer carrying the full weight of Dutch injection against the EBN (Energie Beheer Nederland) EUR 233 million state mandate 1.
The GTS (Gasunie Transport Services) 2026/27 security-of-supply target sets a 115 TWh combined fill target across the three facilities. With Norg and Grijpskerk starting empty and Bergermeer the only injection vehicle with active state budget behind it, the Dutch contribution to the EU aggregate pace skews binary on whether EBN can ramp through May and June. Facility-level injection rates are not in the AGSI+ public feed, so the next Dutch-specific data point arrives only indirectly via the bloc-wide print.
The operating consequence is that one facility now carries a system risk that was previously distributed across three. Bergermeer is a depleted reservoir on the conventional Dutch model, and ramping a single asset against a 115 TWh target compresses the timeline for any technical issue across its compression train or wells. The GasTerra-to-NAM handover dynamic that produced the zero carry-in was a contractual tidy-up rather than a market-driven depletion, which is what makes the resulting concentration of injection risk a structural feature of the season rather than a passing data print.
