Alternatives to Russian gas in the European market have started to materialize and firm up since Russia’s decision to halt flows to Bulgaria and Poland.
Poland is now cut off from Russian gas as of yesterday, but a new pipeline to Lithuania opened on the 1st May will provide some supply relief.
Bulgaria too has been cut off by Russia, but announcement of a new floating LNG facility opening in 2023 in nearby Greece will keep them buoyant.
France, Spain, and the UK have accounted for most LNG imports in the past month.
The limited gas pipeline capacity in Europe has resulted in weaker price couplings between different regional benchmark prices.
The UK’s NBP spot benchmark is trading at a large discount to the TTF, priced at €46 at closing yesterday compared to €96 for the TTF spot.
Russian pipeline flows to Europe are stable today ~250 MCMD, after Flows via the Yamal pipeline from Germany to Poland went to zero yesterday.
Norway has ramped up its gas flows to Europe, currently at ~329 MCMD, up 17% week over week.
Nervousness in the market is driving gas prices (TTF) to $35/MMBTU today, up nearly 7% day on day, following the new list of sanctions including a phase out from the EU announced earlier.
In addition to concern in the market over EU sanctions, there is also a upside risk related to threats from Russia terminating gas exports, as has already happened with Bulgaria and Poland.
If Russia shuts off supplies to more countries unwilling to pay in rubles then prices could skyrocket in the near term.
Most European countries will struggle to replace a sudden drop in supply.
Germany and Italy in particular are likely to suffer severe economic consequences given their heavy reliance on Russian gas imports.
Poland has currently ample natural gas storage, currently at 79%.
Poland has prepared well for this eventuality and has the capacity to ramp up LNG imports and will also benefit from the Poland-Lithuania Gas Connector (GIPL) that started operating on 1 May with a capacity of 2.4 Bcm/year.
Yesterday’s announcement that a new FSRU facility near the Greek port of Alexandroupolis, will start operations at the end of 2023 will be welcome news in Sofia.
Asian gas prices have been falling since last week due to lower demand and lockdowns.
Pricing in the region continues to trail the European market, while still competing with Europe for LNG deliveries.




