8 Sep 2023 11:24

Gas prices rising amid strike in Australia; Gazprom requests 42.4 mcm for transit via Ukraine

MOSCOW. Sept 8 (Interfax) - Spot prices for gas in Europe and Asia are rising amid the strike at Chevron's Australian plants that supply around 7% of the world's LNG.

UKRAINIAN TRANSIT

The Gas Transport System Operator of Ukraine, or GTSOU, has accepted a booking from Gazprom today to transport 42.4million cubic meters of gas through the country, and the figure was 42.4 mcm yesterday, data from the GTSOU show.

The published nomination is technically the maximum possible flow in this direction, given all of the restrictions imposed by the Ukrainian side.

Capacity was requested only through one of two entry points into Ukraine's Gas Transport System, the Sudzha metering station. A request was not accepted through the Sokhranovka metering station.

"Gazprom is supplying Russian gas for transit through the territory of Ukraine at the volume confirmed by the Ukraine side via the Sudzha metering station at 42.4 mcm on September 8, with booking via the Sokhranovka metering station declined," Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov told reporters.

The GTSOU has declared a force majeure with respect to acceptance of gas for transit through Sokhranovka, claiming that it cannot control the Novopskov compressor station. The route through Sokhranovka had provided transit of more than 30 mcm of gas per day.

Gazprom believes that there are no grounds for the force majeure or obstacles to continuing operations as before.

EUROPEAN MARKET

Wind turbines provided an average of 11% of the region's electricity needs yesterday, within the long-term norm, with the figure having been 13.5% in September 2022 and 13% in August 2023, according to WindEurope.

The day-ahead contract at the Dutch TTF gas hub in the Netherlands closed at $361 per thousand cubic meters, with the spot price having risen 8% on Tuesday.

Gas prices have been rising about 4% to $376 per thousand cubic meters today owing to the threat of a strike in Australia.

There is a widening split between LNG prices in Asia and those in Europe. In Asia, the most expensive futures contract for October on the JKM Platts index is $476 per thousand cubic meters, and futures under the LNG North-West Europe Marker are $394 per thousand cubic meters.

EUROPEAN INVENTORIES

Europe continues the gas-injection season into underground gas storage (UGS) facilities. Current inventory levels in Europe's UGS facilities are 93.47%, which is 11 percentage points above the average for the same date over the past five years, according to Gas Infrastructure Europe.

Inventories increased 0.05 percentage point during the gas day for September 6, with the pace still markedly lagging the usual injection levels over the past five years. Nevertheless, reserves have already reached well above the target level of 90% storage capacity to the highest figure ever on the corresponding date since Gas Infrastructure Europe began observing.

Meanwhile, Europe has been withdrawing gas from UGS facilities more frequently by half of the injection volumes, with Belgium and France fully off-taking on Wednesday.

European LNG terminals operated at an average capacity of 50% in August, and they have averaged 57% since the beginning of September.

U.S. INVENTORIES

The state of gas in UGS facilities in the United States is of increasing importance for the global market, and the country is actively increasing gas exports.

The U.S. continues the season for injecting gas into UGS facilities. Inventories rose 900 million cubic meters for the latest reporting week, which is 50% lower than the typical volume for this time of the year.

The current level of inventories is 66%, which is 8 percentage points higher than the average figure for the past five years, according to the U.S. Energy Department's Energy Information Administration.