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EUROPE GAS-Prices firm on Ukraine storage attacks, wider geopolitical threats

April 11 - Dutch and British wholesale gas costs rose on Thursday early morning on issues about attacks on Ukrainian gas storages and continuous geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, which assisted to offset milder weather condition over the next couple of days.

The benchmark front-month agreement at the Dutch TTF hub rose by 1.30 euros to 28.65 euros per megawatt hour ( MWh) by 0917 GMT, while the day-ahead contract was 1.55 euros higher at 28.80 euros/MWh.

In Britain, the within-day contract was up 2.70 cent at 69.50 cent per therm, while the day-ahead contract was up 3.00 cent at 69.00 p/therm.

Some cost assistance has originated from reports of Russian attacks on 2 Ukrainian underground gas storage centers, LSEG analyst Wayne Bryan stated in his early morning report.

The facilities continue to operate however the incident has raised the risk of additional attacks on such facilities, he added.

The majority of Ukraine's gas storage capability remains in the western part of the nation and it is able to keep around 30 billion cubic metres of gas, with capability likewise being used to European customers.

The total European gas balance remains comfortable, nevertheless, as revealed by stock levels, which were last seen 60.87%. full usually, an all-time high for this duration of the year,. analysts at Engie Energyscan said in their morning repor.

But the marketplace understands that some threat elements, both on demand. and on supply, can threaten this currently comfy balance. And as a result, it continues to maintain a danger premium on. rates, they included.

Oil rates increased also continue to sit at six-month highs amidst. worries tensions in the Middle East might escalate further.

Japanese buyers of liquefied natural gas (LNG). are renewing inventories, contributing to concerns over. competition for supplies with Europe.

However, warm weather condition and more wind power generation over. the coming days were bearish aspects, as well as strong French. nuclear power supply and enhanced Norwegian supply, LSEG's Bryan. said.

In the European carbon market, the benchmark agreement. was up 1.93 euros at 64.85 euros per metric lot.

(source: Reuters)