Norway's Norwegian Offshore Directorate (Sodir) March 2026 production print recorded gas sales of 10.8 bcm (billion cubic metres) and production averaging 349.3 mcm/day, -1.6% MoM and -0.8% YoY, the second consecutive month of marginal decline 1. Norway sits as the largest single-country supplier of pipeline gas to EU buyers since 2022, which makes the trajectory of these monthly prints structural rather than incidental for the storage-pace question.
The April release, due mid-May, will land lower still. Hammerfest LNG has been offline since 22 April on planned maintenance with a 10 July target , removing roughly 0.15 bcm from a Norwegian total that was already drifting. Two consecutive monthly declines in steady-state production, before the Hammerfest hit lands in the data, point to underlying field decline working through the Norwegian Continental Shelf rather than a one-off shutdown.
For positioning, the question is whether the April Sodir print confirms a third consecutive monthly decline net of Hammerfest downtime. If it does, the Norwegian leg of the EU storage-pace floor sits structurally below where published refill models implicitly assume. Equinor has issued no public guidance on the Hammerfest restart since the outage began, and the marginal decline trend now compounds the silence: the Norwegian supply-side read depends on whether Q2 holds the line or the slope steepens.
