Energy companies turn to Ukraine to store gas as EU nears capacity

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The EU’s stores of natural gas are nearing full capacity, leading the bloc’s energy companies to park excess reserves in Ukraine ahead of the peak demand of the winter months.

According to figures from Gas Infrastructure Europe, the EU’s chambers are now almost 99 per cent full, surpassing Brussels’ target of 90 per cent of storage capacity by November.

The figure indicates the region has stored far more gas to date this year than some had feared in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, because of continued imports of liquefied natural gas and reduced demand.

That makes the EU less vulnerable to an energy shock, although it falls far short of a guarantee that the continent will have all the energy it needs for the coming winter.

“The risk of a gas shortage in Europe is low for this winter, barring any major unplanned supply disruptions or long, deep cold snaps that hit Europe and Asia at the same time,” said Natasha Fielding, head of European gas pricing at Argus, a price reporting agency. “Europe has stocked up as well as it possibly could.”

By contrast, the International Energy Agency, the west’s energy watchdog, warned last year that storage facilities in Europe risked being only two-thirds full by now.

With EU storage almost at capacity, companies are increasingly turning to Ukraine, home to Europe’s largest tanks, to store their reserves, pushing the amount of natural gas held in the country to its highest level since Russia’s invasion last year.

Some are also paying LNG tankers to act as offshore “floating storage” to increase capacity.

The UK has had similar success to the EU in filling all of its storage to near capacity, with current rates of 95 per cent, though UK capacity is much smaller than many other European countries’.

Analysts say additional gas in storage could guard against further big rises in European gas prices, which dropped as much as 10 per cent on Tuesday on forecasts of warmer weather in coming weeks.

However, the region’s increased reliance on LNG after Russia cut gas supplies last year has made Europe more sensitive to potential supply disruptions despite the now ample reserves.

The price of TTF, the European gas benchmark, has also been volatile this year as traders reacted to the war between Israel and Hamas — with Israel stopping output at one offshore field not far from Gaza — and strikes at Australian LNG plants.

Ukraine has emerged as a storage alternative despite the risks from Russia’s invasion in part because it has offered incentives such as cheap storage tariffs and custom duty exemptions for three years, which allows gas to be easily reimported to the EU.

The tanks in the country are largely situated deep underground in the west of the country, far from the front lines, and currently contain more than 2bn cubic metres of gas belonging to EU entities, according to Naftogaz, the state energy company.

The company has offered more than 10bn cubic metres — a third of Ukraine’s national capacity — to foreign customers.

Oleksiy Chernyshov, Naftogaz chief executive, said that European companies were taking a “pure commercial risk” putting their gas into Ukrainian storage, which despite being far from the fighting could still be targeted by Russian strikes.

Naftogaz said that 128 of its facilities across the country had been damaged by Russian attacks between January and October this year, though people in the industry say no underground storage has been hit.

The EU and Ukraine are also discussing the possibility of insuring the storage facilities against damage owing to the war. Chernyshov said any guarantees would further increase the use of Ukrainian tanks but added that he did not expect insurance to be viable in “the foreseeable future”.

“Commercial companies have put more than €1bn value [of gas] into Ukrainian storage [despite] being in a full-scale war regardless of anything,” he said. “Imagine what would happen . . . with additional insurance.”

Meanwhile 21 tankers were classified as floating LNG storage off the coast of Europe as of Monday, according to Alex Froley, market analyst at consultancy ICIS. That is up from 16 last week, and around 10 at the start of October.

“If current weather and supply and demand conditions remain stable, I would expect to see a continued build-up in floating storage across the course of November, perhaps reaching up to 30 cargoes waiting off Europe,” Froley said.

The Ukrainian and floating storage add to the near-maximum 100 bcm of stored natural gas that Europe can draw on in the winter, as heating demand picks up. EU gas storage alone can meet around 2 to 2.5 months of peak winter consumption.

Wayne Bryan, director of European gas research at LSEG, said current storage levels offered a short-term buffer but warned that cold weather or outages in Norway, a key gas supplier to Europe, would “drain those storages rapidly”.

“The lack of viable alternatives to LNG . . . will leave the EU gas market exposed to enhanced levels of volatility,” he said.

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