EU gas storage stands at 30% of capacity — below the same point last year and far short of the EU regulation requiring member states to reach 90% by 1 November. Bloomberg assessed that Europe can absorb current prices, with Dutch TTF contracts having nearly doubled from the low €30s to over €60/MWh this week, if the conflict ends within one month. Beyond that, the continent faces a genuine supply crisis heading into next winter's restocking season.
Filling storage from 30% to 90% requires injecting roughly 60 percentage points over six to seven months — a rate dependent on steady LNG arrivals through summer. That supply chain is broken at every link. QatarEnergy ceased all production at Ras Laffan and Mesaieed after Iranian drone strikes shut 20% of global LNG output . Vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has fallen 80% below normal . Three major P&I clubs — American Steamship Owners Mutual, London P&I, and Skuld — cancelled war risk coverage for the Gulf this week , meaning commercial shipping cannot resume even after hostilities cease until insurers complete syndicated risk reassessments that typically take weeks. The supply disruption now operates on an institutional calendar that no Ceasefire can accelerate.
Europe's post-2022 energy strategy rested on a single premise: that LNG could replace Russian pipeline gas. Between 2022 and 2025, the EU built floating regasification terminals, signed long-term Qatari contracts, and brought TTF prices down from the August 2022 peak of €340/MWh to the low €30s. That infrastructure is intact. The supply feeding it is not. The 2022 crisis disrupted one supply route while alternatives remained available. This conflict has struck the diversified sources themselves — Iran has degraded production, refining, and transit simultaneously .
If Bloomberg's one-month window closes without resolution, European governments face a choice between competing with Asian buyers for remaining non-Gulf LNG, drawing down reserves, or imposing demand rationing — measures last deployed in the winter of 2022–23, when Germany nationalised Uniper and the EU capped wholesale gas prices. The political tolerance for a second round of energy austerity in four years, across an EU already contending with slow growth and rising defence commitments, has not been tested.
