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Next round of gas purchases by the EU will take place in March

Next round of gas purchases by the EU will take place in March

Gas capacity platform Prisma (which hosts the EU purchasing platform) announced on Friday that the European Union will be holding its next round joint gas purchases in March. The platform is seeking buyers' demand for the next five-year period to help Europe replace Russian gas.

In 2023, the EU created a platform for joint gas purchases to give participants more leverage in negotiating better deals. This was after Russia cut gas deliveries to Europe by 2022 and pushed European energy prices up to record levels.

The scheme collects the demand from companies and then searches for offers from global gas suppliers. It then matches buyers with sellers. Brussels does not get involved in the negotiations between companies that lead to the signing of contracts.

Prisma announced in a press release that buyers can submit their demand for gas or natural gas liquefied deliveries from July 2025 through October 2030. The next round will begin on March 12 and the buyers and sellers are expected to be matched up by March 25.

The report added that "buyers and sellers may now specify their preference for LNG to be delivered free on board, enabling more international suppliers to participate."

Free-on-board contracts for LNG allow buyers to resell the cargoes. This gives them more flexibility in redistributing fuel where it is most needed.

The joint buying platform, which was implemented during the energy crises as a temporary solution, will expire at the end March.

EU sources said this month that the European Commission was working on a permanent replacement. It plans to start joint purchasing for hydrogen in September. Then, it will move onto critical minerals during the third quarter and then gas.

EU scheme has far exceeded the Commission's original target of 13.5 billion cu m of gas. However, because companies do not have to report when they sign contracts, Brussels does not know how much gas was purchased through the platform.

Three EU sources said that this will change with the relaunch of the platform, as companies will be required to report future deals, but prices will not be included, because they're deemed commercially sensitive.

The joint purchasing scheme does not buy Russian gas.

(source: Reuters)