Gazprom requests 42.4 mcm for transit via Ukraine on Tuesday, same as previous day

MOSCOW. Nov 1 (Interfax) – Gazprom’s request for pumping Russian gas through Ukraine has not changed markedly from the previous days and months.

UKRAINIAN TRANSIT

Gas Transmission System Operator of Ukraine, or GTSOU, has accepted a booking from Gazprom today to transport 42.4 million cubic meters of gas through the country, as on Monday, data from GTSOU show.

Capacity was requested only through one of two entry points into Ukraine’s Gas Transport System, the Sudzha metering station. A request was not accepted through the Sokhranovka metering station.

"Gazprom is supplying Russian gas for transit through the territory of Ukraine at the volume confirmed by the Ukraine side via the Sudzha metering station at 42.4 mcm on November 1, with booking via the Sokhranovka metering station declined," Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov told reporters.

GTSOU has declared a force majeure with respect to acceptance of gas for transit through Sokhranovka, claiming that it cannot control the Novopskov compressor station. The route through Sokhranovka had provided transit of more than 30 mcm of gas per day.

Gazprom believes there are no grounds for the force majeure or obstacles to continuing operations as before.

EUROPEAN MARKET

Following the exceptionally warm weather at the end of October, the region’s temperatures are expected to return to their long-term average as of the beginning of November.

Nearly all European countries have filled their storage facilities either to the standard of 80% or to the maximum level. European liquefied natural gas terminals operated at an average of 59% of capacity in September, as in August, rising to around 60% in October, though productivity was below 60% for half the month, even below 52%, data from Gas Infrastructure Europe indicate.

Owing to the unusually warm temperatures in October, the spot price for gas in Europe – the day-ahead contract at the TTF hub in the Netherlands – has reached at $272 per thousand cubic meters, though Tuesday’s contract has risen to $318. The December futures contract has jumped to $1,250. Against this background, Asian prices – futures on the JKM spot index – are again higher than European prices, which could result in available LNG consignments being redirected from Europe to Asia.

Wind turbines generated less than 16% of the EU’s electricity on average on Monday, following 18% on average last week, according to data from WindEurope.

The Nord Stream pipeline is completely shut down due to problems with equipment maintenance caused by sanctions. In addition, last week two strings of Nord Stream 1 and one of Nord Stream 2 depressurized near the Danish island of Bornholm.

EUROPEAN INVENTORIES

Europe continues to inject gas into underground gas storage facilities, with the average level of reserves reaching the targeted 80% at the end of August, since when the pace of injection has slowed. European storage typically transitions from net injection to net off-take around October 20.

Inventories in UGS facilities have risen to 94.68%, up 0.22 percentage points from October 30, the last reporting date, according to Gas Infrastructure Europe data. Over 100 bcm of active gas have accumulated in UGS facilities in absolute terms.

Gas inventories in UGS facilities currently exceed 80% in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, and Spain.

Gas stocks at the Incukalns UGS facility in Latvia are the lowest in the EU and are stuck at 57%. This UGS facility is responsible for reserve gas supplies to Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, as well as Finland.

U.S. INVENTORIES

The injection rate into U.S. UGS facilities dropped over 50% for the latest reporting week, as on October 21, for the third consecutive week, with less than 1.5 billion cubic meters injected, which was the lowest figure in the last ten weeks. The average for the previous five weeks was 3.2 bcm, from 2.9 to 3.7 bcm.

U.S. gas companies have ramped up off-season injection owing to the end of the air conditioning period and the scheduled maintenance shutdown until October 18 at the Cove Point LNG plant. However, there will likely be decreasingly less available gas to replenish reserves because of rising exports and gas consumption domestically.

The current inventory level is below 71%, which is substantially below inventory at UGS facilities in Europe, and in Russia, which has over 90%.

UGS inventories in the U.S. are now 9.2% above the five-year minimum, according to the U.S. Energy Department’s Energy Information Administration. Current inventory lags 5.5% behind the five-year average.

Analysts at Rystad Energy have separately expressed concern regarding the situation in the eastern region of the United States, including Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio. The summer was exceptionally warm, and injection was less than in previous years. The region will have to increase imports of expensive LNG in order to balance the market.

administrator

Related Articles