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The price of gas in Europe is rising as demand increases with cooler temperatures

The wholesale gas prices in the Netherlands and Britain rose on Tuesday morning, as cooler temperatures forecasted by the weather forecasters increased demand for gas.

LSEG data shows that the benchmark Dutch front-month contract was up 0.09 euros at 33.10 Euro per Megawatt Hour (MWh), which is $11.43/mmBtu at 0819 GMT.

The Dutch day-ahead contracts was up by 0.10 euros at 32.85 Euro/MWh

The British gas front-month price increased by 0.36 pence to 81.67 pence a therm.

LSEG data shows that the local distribution zone demand in Northwest Europe will increase by 52 gigawatt-hours/day, to 781 GWh/d, for the next day.

In a daily note, LSEG analyst Dzmitry Dauhalevich stated that the temperature had dropped by 0.5 degrees Celsius.

LSEG data revealed that Norwegian exports were curtailed by maintenance. They are forecast to fall 7 mcm/d and be at 240 million cube metres/day.

In a daily report, Auxilione said that "Temperature is now a major focus for near-term delivery contracts, and it will drive the direction of future projects."

Market participants will be looking for further details on a gas supply agreement after Hungary's Foreign Minister announced that he was signing a long-term contract to purchase gas later that day.

The benchmark carbon contract in Europe was down by 0.22 euros at 76.95 euro per metric ton. (Reporting by Susanna Twidale, Editing by Sonia Cheema).

(source: Reuters)