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European Oil Markets
8JUN

Central EU hub premiums top EUR 2/MWh above TTF

3 min read
10:46UTC

ACER's winter gas wholesale report identified Central European hub premiums widening to more than EUR 2/MWh above TTF, a structural locational basis created by the shift from eastern pipeline supply to western LNG entry points.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The EUR 2/MWh Central European basis premium is structural, not cyclical, and leaves TTF-indexed industrial contracts underhedged against delivered cost.

ACER's winter gas wholesale report found that Central European hub premiums widened to more than EUR 2/MWh above the TTF benchmark. The structural cause is a supply geography shift: gas flows have moved from eastern pipeline routes to western LNG entry points, creating a locational basis that has not existed at this magnitude before. Prior to the Russian pipeline cuts and Hormuz disruption, Central European hubs tracked TTF closely because easterly pipeline supply arrived near the consumption centres. That supply architecture no longer exists.

The premium creates a specific problem for industrial consumers. Austria, Italy and other Central European offtakers on TTF-indexed supply contracts are underhedged against their actual delivered cost. A EUR 2/MWh basis sounds modest in isolation; applied across a continental industrial estate consuming hundreds of TWh annually, it compounds into a material unhedged exposure. The mandate-driven injection that sustains EU aggregate storage reinforces the western entry-point concentration, which in turn feeds the basis premium.

For trading desks, the CEGH and PSV premium structure offers a locational basis trade. The structural driver is semi-permanent: Russian pipeline supply is banned, Qatari LNG via Hormuz remains disrupted, and the EU's regasification infrastructure is concentrated on the Atlantic and North Sea coasts. Until new eastern pipeline supply appears or demand destruction closes Central European consumption, the premium persists.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In Europe, gas prices in different countries should theoretically be the same because the gas can flow freely between them. But because most gas used to arrive from Russia in the east and now arrives mainly as LNG in the west, countries in the middle of Europe like Austria and Italy have to pay more to get it transported from the western terminals. The EUR 2 per megawatt-hour premium is the extra cost of that longer transport journey.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Austrian and Italian industrial users on TTF-indexed long-term contracts are systematically underhedged: their delivered cost is EUR 2/MWh above their contract price, creating an unbooked loss that will flow through to 2026 industrial energy cost reports in Q3.

  • Precedent

    The EUR 2/MWh locational basis establishes that the EU single gas market is structurally divided into a western LNG-entry zone and a central/eastern pipeline-dependent zone with permanently different delivered costs, a market structure change not priced into most long-term industrial contracts.

First Reported In

Update #13 · Storage on track by 45 GWh; one outage away

EDF· 29 May 2026
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