EU energy ministers have reached an agreement to cap gas prices in the bloc when they exceed the price cap for three days. Operational from 15 February 2023 and applying to gas contracts traded on the TTF between one month and a year ahead. Prices must also be €35 per megawatt hour above an average of global liquefied natural gas prices in order to be triggered. The cap will not apply to private gas trades, those arranged outside energy exchanges, although there is an option to review this later, once the price cap is in force.
December 2022 Between December 15 and December 23 natural gas prices fell €49 to €85 due to a combination of high LNG imports, high levels of storage and lower demand in Europe. At 28 December, the EU storage capacity was at 83.2% and the price of January delivery gas had fallen to €76.18pmh. Russian gas exports to countries outside of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) totaled 100.9bcm in 2022 compared to 185.1b in 2021 a fall of 45.5%.
Gazprom overall production in 2022 was 413bcm, down from 515bcm in 2021 which will affect the profitability of Gazprom, who is restricted in the price it can sell gas for to the domestic market. 2022 exports to China of 15bcm generated under US$4b at a price around US$25pmh.
January to March 2023 The warm weather in Europe continued into the new year with 4 January prices dropping to €64.20pmh. January gas supplied by Russia to Europe was 1.7b m3 compared with 13b m3 average per month for the 2021 year. The price of natural gas in Europe fell to an 18-month low in mid February of €49pmh with gas storage across the European Union at 65% capacity, well above the average of 45% at this time of year. By 31 March the price had fallen further, to €43pmh. Gazprom's pipeline gas exports to Europe are taxed at 30%, but have fallen 75% from pre-war levels in January on the remaining routes through Ukraine and Turkey.
April to June 2023 The EU used 18% less gas than the 10 year average in the period October 2022 to January 2023, showing demand for gas has fallen. In April the price of gas remains in the €40-45pmh band for future deliveries. In May they fell below €30. Gasprom expects exports of gas in 2023 to be half of 2022. 2023 Exports to Europe total just 8.14Bcm in first 4 months of 2023, with gas continuing to move through a Ukraine pipeline at 40-42mcm per day. In May the price of gas fell to €23-25pmh band for future deliveries, a two-year low. In May, Russian deliveries via Turkstream was just 0.7 Bcm and via Ukraine 1.07 Bcm. Tax revenue from gas export tariffs fell 81% in May to 38.3 billion rubles. mineral extraction tax on gas was 106.6 billion rubles, which includes an extra monthly tax on Gazprom of 50 billion rubles per month. Overall total tax collected in May was 46% lower than May 2022. June revenue was lower at 125 billion rubles, which includes the extra monthly 50 billion tax on Gazprom. Gazprom results for the first half of 2023 show revenue of 4.1 trillion rubles (7.0 trillion in H1 2022), expenses 3.2 trillion rubles (4.3 trillion in H1 2022), net profit 331 billion (2.6 trillion in H1 2022), net debt 5.3 trillion (36% increase since H1 2022).
July to December 2023 Percentage of piped gas, compared to their total purchases, bought by EU countries from Russia in the period January to July 2023: • Slovakia 88% through the
Ukrainian pipeline • Hungary 15% through Ukraine and 32% though
TurkStream • Austria 46% through Ukraine • Slovenia 30% through Ukraine • Romania 16% though TurkStream • Italy and Croatia 3% each through Ukraine The EU is well prepared for the 2023-24 winter, even under the worst weather conditions the EU will still have 20% in stored capacity by April 2024. ==See also==