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EUROPE GAS-Prices increase further in the middle of Middle East, supply issues

LONDON, April 16 - Dutch and British gas rates rose even more on Tuesday afternoon amid concerns about tensions in the Middle East, U.S. LNG supply and an unintended blackout in Norway.

The benchmark front-month agreement at the Dutch TTF center rose by 2.1 euro to 33.45 euros per megawatt hour ( MWh) by 1458 GMT, while the day-ahead agreement was 2.8 euros higher at 33.88 euros/MWh, LSEG information revealed.

In the British market, the day-ahead price rose by 6.3 cent to 83.8 cent per therm.

Unpredictability in the Middle East will be an issue for the European gas market, especially with the area more reliant on LNG materials given that the Russia-Ukraine war, stated experts at ING.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday summoned his war cabinet for the 2nd time in less than 24 hours to weigh a reaction to Iran's weekend missile and drone attack, a government source stated.

Also supplying rate support is an unplanned blackout at Norway's Nyhamna processing plant, which has caused Norwegian daily gas streams to Europe falling by around 15% because Friday to below 300 million cubic metres/day, ING experts included.

The failure has been extended till Wednesday.

In north-west Europe, temperature levels are anticipated to drop to around 3.5 degrees Celsius listed below the seasonal average by Thursday this week and the colder weather condition is anticipated to last till the end of this month, LSEG data showed.

Traders said issues over U.S. LNG likewise buoyed prices, with Sabine Pass and Cameroon LNG experiencing lower feedgas and Freeport LNG still primarily offline.

LSEG data showed Sabine Pass and Cameron are each down more than -0.6 billion cubic meters (bcf) on Tuesday, with the 7 day moving average for LNG feedstock listed below 11 Bcf/d, the most affordable because last June.

Freeport LNG's liquefaction plant remains primarily offline for a 5th straight day, with gas utilization rates at 125 million cubic feet per day (mmcf/d), or 5% of its completely functional use, information from monetary company LSEG revealed late on Monday.

In the European carbon market, the benchmark contract was up 3.75 euros at 74.30 euros per metric heap.

(source: Reuters)