EU aggregate gas storage crossed 35.05% on Sunday 10 May and reached 35.4% on Tuesday 12 May, clearing the marquee threshold flagged at 34.3% in update #8 . GIE AGSI+ is the authoritative daily storage data source for EU underground caverns; the wires read the print as a clean positive on 10-11 May. The arithmetic underneath does not.
From 7 to 12 May the EU added roughly 1.1 percentage points across five days, a pace of 0.22 pp/day. The floor needed to hit 80% by 1 November, the reduced statutory target the European Commission cut from 90% in April , is 0.257 pp/day. EnergyRiskIQ's parallel arithmetic for the original 90% target requires 3,472 GWh/day of bloc-wide injection, a rate the EU is not running at and shows no sign of reaching 1. Holding the current pace lands the bloc near 73% on 1 November, a shortfall of roughly 36 TWh against the official mandate.
This is the third consecutive briefing where the headline data point has landed inside the official success bound while the rate of change has disqualified the year. Update #6 framed the gap . Update #8 narrowed it to 0.248 pp/day . Update #9 confirms the gap persists at 0.22 to 0.25 even with Germany injecting 959 GWh on 4 May and a season-high 745 GWh on 25 April still in the rearview. Peripheral estates have carried the injection load while Germany sits at roughly 27 to 30% twelve days into May, materially below the bloc average.
The path of least resistance from here is silent acceptance of a sub-target outcome rather than a fresh legal cut. The 80% number was already a politically negotiated retreat from 90% , and a second formal cut requires Council unanimity that the members who blocked the original 90% will not provide. Bruegel's three-scenario refill model resolved at EUR 26 billion at EUR 45/MWh TTF; at EUR 47.23 the cost line creeps higher inside an unchanged regasification ceiling of approximately 145 bcm per winter season. The structural deficit Germany opened in winter is not closing on a calendar that allows it to close.
