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Dutch prices increase as Middle East tensions cause LNG concerns

Dutch prices increase as Middle East tensions cause LNG concerns

Dutch wholesale gas prices increased on Tuesday afternoon, amid increasing concerns that the escalation in the Iran-Israel conflict will impact the loading and shipping of liquefied gas (LNG), causing a tightening of the market.

According to LSEG, the benchmark Dutch front-month contract for the TTF hub increased by 1,28 euros to reach 38.73 euros per Megawatt Hour (MWh) at 1454 GMT.

The contract for August gained 0.76 euros to 38.90 Euro/MWh.

The British contract was 0.12 pence higher at 93.32 cents per therm.

A trader stated that the gains were driven by events in the Middle East, and the signs that LNG producers were taking extra cautionary measures in the region.

Qatar says gas production is still steady at South Pars after an Israeli airstrike hit the field on Saturday.

QatarEnergy told tankers on Tuesday to stay outside the Strait of Hormuz, and only enter the Gulf the day before loading.

The trader said that if more producers made similar statements, the prices could go up even higher.

On Tuesday, the European Commission proposed official legal measures to implement a ban on Russian Gas Imports. The aim is to end the EU's dependence on Russian Energy by the year 2027.

Austrian official says the European Union is open to resume Russian gas imports if there's a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine.

The Commission's proposals were designed to be able to pass into law if a majority of countries approved them, so that one or two countries could not block it.

The benchmark contract on the European carbon markets has fallen by 0.36 euros to 74.98 euro per metric ton. Reporting by Nina Chestney and Nora Buli, London; editing by Susan Fenton

(source: Reuters)