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EUROPE GAS-Prices blended amid softer need, warmer weather

LONDON, May 13 - Dutch and British wholesale gas rates were mixed on Monday early morning amid a comfortable supply/demand balance with warmer weather suppressing demand and permitting storage injections.

The benchmark front-month agreement at the Dutch TTF hub inched up by 0.15 euro to 30.00 euros per megawatt hour (MWh) by 0845 GMT, while the July agreement was up by 0.19 euro at 30.14 euros/MWh, LSEG data revealed.

In the British market, the front-month price fell by 0.95 cent at 72.00 cent per therm.

Temperatures are now anticipated to fall somewhat, albeit holding above seasonal normal for the weeks ahead. No real change to the hidden outlook which stays favorable with continued level of sensitivity to international events, consultancy Auxilione stated in an early morning note.

LSEG information showed that temperatures throughout Europe and in Britain will be somewhat lower, but still above regular.

The bearish essential image suggests storage injections are back on a healthy refilling trajectory stated LSEG expert Yuriy Onyshkiv.

European gas storage facilities were last seen 64.7% full, according to Gas Infrastructure Europe (GIE) information.

Loose Northwest Europe balance has actually compromised demand for LNG ( melted natural gas prices) freights, decreasing the impact of a few of the bullish signals on the global LNG market originating from southeast Asia earlier recently, Onyshkiv added.

Asian spot LNG prices rose to $10.50 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) on more powerful demand amidst high temperatures in north and south China.

In the European carbon market, the benchmark agreement was 1.65 euros down at 70.26 euros per metric ton.

(source: Reuters)