Exporters’ Forum: Prolonged decline in European gas demand

Gas demand in Europe continues to fall, says Exporters' Forum. Despite the fall in consumption, European countries are building up their storage reserves in preparation for winter, with a supply rate of almost 90%. The report highlights the impact of factors such as weather conditions and Europe's energy sobriety targets.

Share:

Subscribe for unlimited access to all energy sector news.

Over 150 multisector articles and analyses every week.

Your 1st year at 99 $*

then 199 $/year

*renews at 199$/year, cancel anytime before renewal.

Gas demand in Europe fell sharply in the first half of 2023, and this trend looks set to continue in the second half of the year, says the Gas Exporters Forum (GECF), in a report seen by AFP on Thursday.

Gas storage in Europe ahead of winter despite falling consumption

Under scrutiny since the start of the war in Ukraine, which has complicated gas supplies to the EU deprived of Russian pipelines, consumption fell by 10.6% in the first half of 2023, or 21 billion cubic meters, according to the report. This decline can be explained “primarily by the exceptionally warm winter that enveloped the EU in the first quarter of 2023”, leading to a drop in household heating demand, according to the report.

He also cites the voluntarist policy of Brussels, which has set a 15% consumption reduction target for its 27 member countries. In the second half of 2023, “the probability of observing similar trends in natural gas consumption in Europe remains particularly high”, according to the GECF, which represents a dozen gas-exporting countries outside the USA.

In particular, it relies on the most recent weather forecasts “which suggest that the fourth quarter of 2023 will be characterized by relatively warmer conditions”.

Beyond this element, which remains open to question, the report underlines the need to pursue Europe’s voluntarist sobriety policy. The report mentions the fall in demand from the industrial sector, “unlikely to see any substantial recovery over the next six months”. GECF points to the first half of 2023 as evidence of this: despite a fall in gas prices in Europe, industrial demand has not returned to pre-decline levels.

“For 2023, we expect a drop of around 8% to 10% compared with 2022,” says the Forum.

This is not stopping European countries from filling their storage facilities in anticipation of winter: according to aggregated data from Gas Infrastructure Europe (GIE), an association of European gas infrastructure operators, European storage facilities were on average almost 90% full on Thursday. But they will only cover a fraction of consumption. France, for example, has 130 TWh of underground natural gas storage capacity, or less than a third of its annual gas consumption of around 450 TWh, according to the French Energy Regulatory Commission.

CTCI strengthens its position in Taiwan with a new EPC contract for a regasification unit at the Kaohsiung LNG terminal, with a capacity of 1,600 tonnes per hour.
Exxon Mobil forecasts sustained growth in global natural gas demand by 2050, driven by industrial use and rising energy needs in developing economies.
Capstone Green Energy received a 5.8-megawatt order for its natural gas microturbines, to be deployed across multiple food production facilities in Mexico through regional distributor DTC Machinery.
Private firm Harvest Midstream has signed a $1 billion acquisition deal with MPLX for gas processing and transport infrastructure across three western US states.
Sempra Infrastructure and EQT Corporation have signed a 20-year liquefied natural gas purchase agreement, consolidating Phase 2 of the Port Arthur LNG project in Texas and strengthening the United States’ position in the global LNG market.
Subsea7 was selected to lead phase 3 of the Sakarya gas field, a strategic contract for Türkiye’s energy supply valued between $750mn and $1.25bn.
Tokyo protests against Chinese installations deemed unilateral in a disputed maritime zone, despite a bilateral agreement stalled since 2010.
Bp has awarded Baker Hughes a long-term service agreement for the Tangguh liquefied natural gas plant, covering spare parts, maintenance and technical support for its turbomachinery equipment.
Chinese group Sinopec has launched a large-scale seismic imaging campaign across 3,000 km² in Mexico using nodal technology from Sercel, owned by Viridien, delivered in August to map areas with complex terrain.
CNOOC Limited has signed two production sharing contracts with SKK Migas to explore the Gaea and Gaea II blocks in West Papua, alongside EnQuest and Agra.
A consortium led by ONEOK is developing a 450-mile pipeline to transport up to 2.5 billion cubic feet of gas per day from the Permian Basin to the Gulf Coast.
AMIGO LNG has awarded Drydocks World a major EPC contract to build the world’s largest floating LNG liquefaction terminal, aimed at strengthening exports to Asia and Latin America.
The Alberta Utilities Commission approves the Need Assessment Application for the Yellowhead Pipeline, marking a key step for Canadian Utilities, a subsidiary of ATCO. The project foresees significant economic benefits for the province.
Nigeria LNG signs major deals with oil groups to ensure gas supply to its liquefaction infrastructure over two decades.
The European Union and Washington have finalized an agreement setting $750 billion in U.S. gas, oil and nuclear purchases, complemented by $600 billion in European investments in the United States by 2028.
Sempra Infrastructure and ConocoPhillips signed a 20-year LNG sales agreement for 4 Mtpa, confirming their joint commitment to expanding the Port Arthur LNG liquefaction terminal in Texas.
Russian pipeline gas exports to China rose by 21.3% over seven months, contrasting with a 7.6% drop in oil shipments during the same period.
MCF Energy continues operations at the Kinsau-1A drilling site, targeting a promising Jurassic formation first tested by Mobil in 1983.
The group announces an interim dividend of 53 cps, production of 548 Mboe/d, a unit cost of $7.7/boe and major milestones on Scarborough, Trion, Beaumont and Louisiana LNG, while strengthening liquidity and financial discipline.
Norway’s combined oil and gas production exceeded official forecasts by 3.9% in July, according to preliminary data from the regulator.

Log in to read this article

You'll also have access to a selection of our best content.

or

Go unlimited with our annual offer: $99 for the 1styear year, then $ 199/year.