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Prices of European Gases remain stable as a weaker demand offsets Norwegian Supply Cuts

Prices of European Gases remain stable as a weaker demand offsets Norwegian Supply Cuts

The Dutch and British wholesale prices of gas were not much different on Tuesday morning, as the warmer weather helped to reduce demand and offset a weaker Norwegian supply due to maintenance at Troll gas fields.

LSEG data shows that the benchmark Dutch front-month contract was 36.84 euros per Megawatt Hour (MWh) or $12.25/mmBtu at 0818 GMT. This is a decrease of 0.31 euros.

The Dutch July contract increased by 0.06 Euros to 36.88 euros/MWh.

The British day-ahead contracts rose 0.35 pence, to 87.60p/therm.

In a daily research report, LSEG analyst Saku Jusli stated that "demand is slowly decreasing with the warmer temperatures."

Jussila stated that the total gas demand in northwest Europe was expected to fall by 150 gigawatt-hours/day (GWh/d).

The Norwegian supply cut was offset by the lower demand.

Equinor announced on Monday that it had extended the partial outage of Norway's Troll gas field to May 31 due to a compressor malfunction.

In a daily report, Auxilione stated that "Norwegian flow has been volatile in the lead up to a planned period of maintenance which will result in reduced flows by as much as 100 mcm" (million cubic meters) until early July.

Gas Infrastructure Europe data shows that the need to refill Europe's gas storage, currently 46.3% full at present, also supports prices.

Jefferies analysts stated that "Last Week, the build was lower for this time of year than usual - 1.8 billion cube metres (bcm), compared to a five-year-average of 2.5 bcm."

The benchmark contract on the European carbon markets was down by 0.58 euros, at 72.40 euro per metric ton. (Reporting and editing by David Goodman. Susanna Twidal)

(source: Reuters)