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European Energy Markets
12MAY

Storage 35.4% met, 80% trajectory missed

4 min read
10:23UTC

EU aggregate gas storage reached 35.4% on Tuesday 12 May, clearing the marquee threshold flagged in update #8, yet the 7-to-12 May injection pace of 0.22 pp/day stayed below the 0.257 pp/day floor the bloc needs for 80% by 1 November.

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Key takeaway

Crossing 35.4% on Brussels's calendar does not rescue a season tracking to land near 73% on 1 November.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

European countries store natural gas underground in large caverns during summer, then draw from those reserves to heat homes and power industry through winter. The EU set a target: have the caverns 80% full by 1 November. As of 12 May, the caverns are only 35.4% full. At the current rate of 0.22 percentage points per day, Europe would reach about 73% by 1 November, leaving a gap of roughly 36 TWh against the statutory 80% target. That gap is equivalent to about two fully loaded LNG tankers per week that Europe would need to import but cannot procure at the current filling pace. Germany's caverns are only about 27-30% full, well behind the EU average, pulling down the bloc-wide rate. If prices spike in winter as a result, energy bills for households and businesses could rise, and factories that use a lot of gas may cut production.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Germany's structural under-injection through April and early May is the primary driver. Germany entered the 2026 injection season at the lowest fill since 2018, and its average pace since 13 April of 0.179 pp/day has weighed on the bloc average despite peripheral estate contributions.

Germany's storage deficit opened during winter 2025-26 when its swing-producer role (absorbing demand peaks and supply shortfalls) depleted cavern stocks faster than the post-2022 injection ceiling allowed recovery.

The Dutch contribution compounds the problem. GasTerra depleted Norg (59 TWh) and Grijpskerk (24 TWh) to structural zero before the NAM handover , leaving Bergermeer as the sole active Dutch injection facility against an EBN state mandate of EUR 233m. The two largest continental injection estates are both under-pacing; peripheral gains in France and Spain carry the headline number but cannot compensate at scale.

The 36 TWh shortfall against the 80% target translates to approximately two LNG cargoes per week through the summer injection window. At EUR 47.23 TTF, procuring that substitution volume costs roughly EUR 26bn at the Bruegel lower-bound, rising as TTF approaches EUR 55 on the forward strip. That cost lands on member states whose fiscal capacity is already stretched by the EUR 11bn in untargeted VAT and excise cuts tracked by Bruegel through May .

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A 73% storage landing on 1 November raises acute cold-snap gas-shortage risk in Q1 2027 that a 73% starting position cannot buffer as effectively as the statutory 80% floor.

    Short term · 0.78
  • Consequence

    German and Dutch chronic under-pacing means peripheral estates (France, Spain, Poland) carry the bloc headline; if any peripheral estate slows, the aggregate pace collapses without a German acceleration.

    Immediate · 0.82
  • Risk

    The EUR 55.21 twelve-month TTF forward prices in tighter winter conditions; a failure to close the 36 TWh gap through July would revise that forward sharply higher, compressing industrial margins further.

    Medium term · 0.71
First Reported In

Update #9 · Storage 35% met, 80% trajectory still missed

EnergyRiskIQ· 12 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Hungarian and Slovak gas buyers and regulators
Hungarian and Slovak gas buyers and regulators
Hungary cleared EUR 123.23/MWh on 12 May, EUR 54 above Spain's same-day clearing and the largest single-market premium of the briefing series, as ACER named it among seven NRAs in TurkStream derogation opinions with the 5 August EC ruling pending. A denial of derogation removes the only available pipeline substitute for Russian LNG banned since 25 April.
Norwegian upstream producers (Equinor, ORLEN Upstream Norway)
Norwegian upstream producers (Equinor, ORLEN Upstream Norway)
Equinor started the Eirin field on 5 May (27.6 mmboe via Gassled) and signed NOK 17bn of Q1 drilling contracts on USD 9.77bn adjusted operating income. These are long-horizon defences against the Sodir-confirmed Norwegian production decline, not molecules deliverable inside the 2026 injection window.
European Commission (DG Energy)
European Commission (DG Energy)
The Commission cut the storage target from 90% to 80% in April without enforcement teeth; a second formal cut requires Council unanimity not currently available, leaving silent acceptance of a sub-80% landing as the operative policy posture. The AccelerateEU package offered no storage injection mechanism, confirming consumer-relief tools as the preferred instrument.
Major LNG buyers (Japanese and Korean utilities)
Major LNG buyers (Japanese and Korean utilities)
With JKM-TTF at USD 2.30/MMBtu, Asian buyers retain the routing premium on flexible Atlantic cargoes by a margin of USD 0.80 to 1.10/MMBtu above the cargo-diversion breakeven. The spring demand softening that compressed the spread from USD 3 or more has not reversed the routing direction, and Asian buyers face no material competitive threat from European procurement at prevailing TTF.
Industrial gas consumers (BASF, Yara, Cefic members)
Industrial gas consumers (BASF, Yara, Cefic members)
BASF flagged Verbund site production freezes and Yara curtailed 25% of European output at EUR 47 TTF, confirming that the industrial demand destruction threshold has migrated EUR 23 below the 2022 ceiling. Without a gas price subsidy instrument or trade protection on fertiliser imports, further curtailment is the rational response to any TTF move above EUR 50.
National energy regulators (BNetzA, CRE, ACER)
National energy regulators (BNetzA, CRE, ACER)
ACER's 6 May TurkStream derogation opinions put seven NRAs on notice that the 5 August EC ruling window is live; the concurrent Hungary EUR 123/MWh single-market premium compounds the political pressure on the Commission to either grant or formally deny the derogations before the code application date.