Europe’s Gas Storage Is Draining at the Fastest Pace in Five Years

Below-average winter temperatures are driving the fastest pace of withdrawals from natural gas storage in Europe in five years, as heating demand is rising.

EU gas storage sites were only 47% full as of January 21, according to the latest data from Gas Infrastructure Europe.  

That’s well below the average for the past few years, signaling that Europe will have to import more gas in the summer to replenish storage supplies.

Gas withdrawals have accelerated this month amid colder-than-normal temperatures in most of Europe, and the pace of withdrawals has been the fasters in five years, according to Bloomberg’s estimates.

LNG cargo arrivals have been at less than half of the daily volumes withdrawn from storage.

The cold weather has driven immediate gas demand higher, while the unfavorable price spread between winter and summer prices is not encouraging for stockpiling.

In addition, global gas benchmark prices have jumped in recent weeks as Arctic weather has gripped most of the northern hemisphere, including the United States and Asia.

As a result, prices have spiked, making LNG imports costlier for any customer in Europe and Asia.

The front-month Dutch TTF Natural Gas Futures, the benchmark for Europe’s gas trading, have jumped by 30% since the start of January, from $34 (29 euros) per megawatt-hour (MWh) on January 2 to as much as $45.40 (38.65 euros) per MWh on January 23.

“With heating demand firm and storage withdrawals accelerating, European buyers have been forced to pay up to secure supply,” Ole Hansen, Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank, said this week, noting that the extreme cold has driven a sharp rise in heating demand just as supply flexibility has diminished.   

Traders have sharply turned bullish on European gas, with funds aggressively buying the market, shifting from a net short of 55.1 TWh to a net long of 57.7 TWh over the last reporting week, Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING, wrote in a Thursday note.

“This move was driven fairly equally by short covering and fresh longs entering the market,” Patterson said.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Ørsted Targets Dividend Comeback After Two Brutal Years

    Ørsted targets to reinstate dividends for the financial year 2026, the world’s largest offshore wind developer said on Friday, signaling it may have turned a corner from the worst of…

    Japan’s Mitsui Nears Deal to Buy Stake in Huge Qatar LNG Project

    Japan’s trading company Mitsui & Co is in an advanced stage of talks with QatarEnergy to buy a minority stake in one of Qatar’s mega expansion projects, anonymous sources with…

    Have You Seen?

    Week in MiddleEast: Dubai Unveils 950 MW Solar Park Phase IV; Masdar Expands with 200 MW Solar in Kyrgyzstan and More…

    • February 7, 2026
    Week in MiddleEast: Dubai Unveils 950 MW Solar Park Phase IV; Masdar Expands with 200 MW Solar in Kyrgyzstan and More…

    New Tech Tracks UV Damage Inside Solar Cells

    • February 7, 2026
    New Tech Tracks UV Damage Inside Solar Cells

    PFC Acquires 52.63% Stake in REC, Moves Toward PSU Power Finance Merger

    • February 7, 2026
    PFC Acquires 52.63% Stake in REC, Moves Toward PSU Power Finance Merger

    Japan’s Mitsui Nears Deal to Buy Stake in Huge Qatar LNG Project

    • February 7, 2026
    Japan’s Mitsui Nears Deal to Buy Stake in Huge Qatar LNG Project

    Ørsted Targets Dividend Comeback After Two Brutal Years

    • February 7, 2026
    Ørsted Targets Dividend Comeback After Two Brutal Years

    US Energy Secretary to Visit Venezuela to See Leaders “Before Long”

    • February 6, 2026
    US Energy Secretary to Visit Venezuela to See Leaders “Before Long”

    Global Electricity Demand Surge Forecast by IEA

    • February 6, 2026
    Global Electricity Demand Surge Forecast by IEA

    ConocoPhillips Wants Venezuelan Payback Before Drilling for Oil

    • February 6, 2026
    ConocoPhillips Wants Venezuelan Payback Before Drilling for Oil

    Trump Is Remaking the Global Oil Market, and Exxon and Chevron Want In

    • February 6, 2026
    Trump Is Remaking the Global Oil Market, and Exxon and Chevron Want In

    Oil Servicers Look to Middle East for Growth on Shale Slowdown

    • February 6, 2026
    Oil Servicers Look to Middle East for Growth on Shale Slowdown