ACER, the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators, published opinions on 6 May covering derogation requests from seven national regulatory authorities (NRAs) on EU gas network code application at third-country interconnection points. The seven NRAs are Bulgaria, Estonia, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Slovakia and Spain. The codes apply from 5 August 2026.
ACER is the Ljubljana-based EU body that coordinates national energy regulators and enforces the recast REMIT (Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency) wholesale market rules in force from 29 April . Network codes set the technical, balancing and transaction-reporting standards for cross-border gas; at a third-country entry, they bind the EU side only, which is the structural problem the derogations target.
ACER found that Hungary and Bulgaria had implemented the codes "to the maximum extent possible" pending neighbouring Russian and Turkish operators' simultaneous implementation. Hungary and Slovakia are the two EU member states most dependent on the TurkStream pipeline, which ran at roughly 41 mcm/day in April routing Russian gas through Turkey and the Balkans. The bottleneck on third-country TSO (transmission system operator) cooperation is therefore concentrated on the route already carrying the bloc's heaviest physical-supply political risk.
Final decisions sit with the European Commission. If derogations are granted, EU measurement, balancing and REMIT transaction-reporting standards do not bind at the TurkStream entry from August. For desks running cross-border positions through Hungarian and Slovak hubs, the 5 August date is now a discrete regulatory checkpoint.
