Reuters calculations on ENTSOG (European Network of Transmission System Operators for Gas) data, relayed via Baird Maritime on Monday 4 May, put TurkStream average April flow at 41 mcm/day (million cubic metres per day) 1. The figure broadly corroborates the 40.3 mcm/day EADaily had reported on 27 April , but the framing collapses on inspection. The drop is -25.5% MoM against March 2026 and only -1.7% YoY against April 2025, 1.23 bcm versus 1.25 bcm.
March was the anomaly, not April. The March 2026 surge was front-loading ahead of the Hormuz price spike , the same pattern Bruegel identified in EU LNG terminal data for the same month . Reuters attributes the April reversion to demand and pricing effects rather than pipeline disruption. Gazprom has not published its own monthly statistics since January 2023, which is why a single-source EADaily figure was able to dominate the narrative for a week before a wire-service cross-check landed.
Two positioning points follow. TurkStream is not a new disruption stacked onto the supply book; at 1.23 bcm against 1.25 bcm a year earlier, the YoY shortfall sits well inside seasonal noise. When the only number available comes from one outlet without a wire-service cross-check, the structural reading is doing more work than the data supports, as the EADaily 25% framing showed across the prior week. Lowdown flagged that print as single-source on 27 April ; the corrective Reuters/ENTSOG frame has now landed.
