Germany Boosts Energy Security with New LNG Terminal

The German port of Wilhelmshaven is launching its second LNG terminal to process imported liquefied natural gas, Deutsche Energy Terminal (DET), the state operator of the facility, said on Thursday.
Wilhelmshaven 02 will commence commercial operations on August 29, following a successful commissioning phase, DET said, adding that the new LNG terminal has received approvals from the Oldenburg Trade Supervisory Authority (GAA) without any objections.

Wilhelmshaven is the site of the first German LNG terminal, which began operations in December 2022, via the Höegh Esperanza Floating Storage and Regasification Unit (FSRU).
Germany has installed several floating LNG import terminals since 2022—to make Europe’s biggest economy “independent of Russian gas”.

Until the middle of 2022, Germany received most of its gas from Russia via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline before Russia axed deliveries in early September 2022, claiming an inability to repair gas turbines because of the Western sanctions. The sabotage on Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 occurred at the end of the same month.

After the Russian gas supply stopped, Norway became Germany’s top natural gas supplier, and supplies are coming via pipelines. 

LNG terminals are being used for imports of gas from the United States and other major producers of the super-chilled fuel, and Wilhelmshaven 02 now adds to these. 

“The Wilhelmshaven02 terminal, with the FSRU Excelsior, is now fully operational and can contribute to security of supply and to filling the gas storage facilities before the next heating season,” DET said in a statement. 

This year, FSRU Excelsior is expected to feed up to 1.9 billion cubic meters of natural gas into the German gas grid—equal to the annual natural gas consumption for heating 1.5 million four-person households in multi-family homes. In the two subsequent years, Excelsior’s regasification and grid feed-in capacity will reach capacity equivalent to the annual heating energy of up to 3.7 million households.   

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Kuwait Offers First Crude Cargoes to Asia since Iran War Started

    Kuwait, one of OPEC’s top producers and one of the exporters most affected by the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz, is offering its crude to Asian buyers for the…

    India’s Fuel Demand Falls 6.5%, LPG Consumption Drops 20%

    India’s fuel consumption fell by 6.5% in May from a year earlier while sales of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), a key cooking and industry input fuel, tumbled by 20% as…

    Have You Seen?

    US Natgas Output and Demand to Hit Record Highs in 2026, EIA Says

    • June 10, 2026
    US Natgas Output and Demand to Hit Record Highs in 2026, EIA Says

    Oil Inventories Headed Toward Multi-Decade Lows, US EIA Warns

    • June 10, 2026
    Oil Inventories Headed Toward Multi-Decade Lows, US EIA Warns

    US Power Use to Beat Record Highs in 2026 and 2027 as AI Use Surges, EIA Says

    • June 10, 2026
    US Power Use to Beat Record Highs in 2026 and 2027 as AI Use Surges, EIA Says

    Devon Energy provides Full-Year Forecast After Merger With Coterra Energy

    • June 10, 2026
    Devon Energy provides Full-Year Forecast After Merger With Coterra Energy

    India Eyes Russian Steelmaking Coal Assets

    • June 9, 2026
    India Eyes Russian Steelmaking Coal Assets

    India’s Fuel Demand Falls 6.5%, LPG Consumption Drops 20%

    • June 9, 2026
    India’s Fuel Demand Falls 6.5%, LPG Consumption Drops 20%

    Kuwait Offers First Crude Cargoes to Asia since Iran War Started

    • June 9, 2026
    Kuwait Offers First Crude Cargoes to Asia since Iran War Started

    New York State’s Electricity Reserves are Shrinking, Grid Operator Says

    • June 9, 2026
    New York State’s Electricity Reserves are Shrinking, Grid Operator Says

    US Energy Secretary Says Ship Traffic Through Strait of Hormuz Rising ‘Very Meaningfully’

    • June 9, 2026
    US Energy Secretary Says Ship Traffic Through Strait of Hormuz Rising ‘Very Meaningfully’

    Oil Inventories are Headed Toward Multi-Decade Lows, US EIA Warns

    • June 9, 2026
    Oil Inventories are Headed Toward Multi-Decade Lows, US EIA Warns