Dozens of gas filled ships are piling up off Europe s coasts with nowhere to go Fortune
Dozens of gas-filled ships are piling up off Europe’s coasts with nowhere to go FortuneUkraine InvasionCybersecurityEnergyTravel IndustryAutos Europe ·energy
Not even “free gas”, you actually get paid to burn it. Because, just like oil during COVID, storage is full. Chart from @JanVonGerich
Just as the doomsters predicted pic.twitter.com/jYqJEUokL4— Wasteland Capital (@ecommerceshares) October 24, 2022 The alternative might have meant rolling blackouts. Fortunately the country cannot hoard any more gas as its caverns are bursting at the seams along with those in the rest of Europe.
Europe now has too much gas Here s how the continent dodged Putin s energy squeeze so far
BYChristiaan HetznerOctober 25, 2022, 12:26 PM UTCDozens of LNG tankers are parked off the coast of Europe, waiting for colder winter temperatures to deliver their goods at more advantageous prices.Kiyoshi Ota—Bloomberg/Getty Images Europe’s mad dash for liquefied natural gas (LNG) that drove up the cost of energy and wreaked havoc on the global economy could now cause a crash in spot market prices. LNG ships are piling up around Europe, waiting to deliver their precious cargo as storage caverns across the continent are full to the brim and demand remains tepid owing to mild temperatures. With prices plummeting, floating LNG barges have opted to remain parked near onshore terminals hoping to unload once colder temperatures deplete current reserves. According to the BBC, 51 ships have collected around the continent’s coastal waters. “It’s built up for about, I would say, five to six weeks,” Augustin Prate, vice president of energy and commodity markets at Kayrros, told the broadcaster. EU countries that were heavily dependent on Kremlin-backed energy giant Gazprom rushed to secure a supply in recent months. Germany for example saw its costs for importing natural gas into the country soar to €49.5 billion ($49 billion) in the eight months through August, the latest available data, from just €17.1 billion in the same period the previous year. European next-hour natural gas prices just went negative. ?Not even “free gas”, you actually get paid to burn it. Because, just like oil during COVID, storage is full. Chart from @JanVonGerich
Just as the doomsters predicted pic.twitter.com/jYqJEUokL4— Wasteland Capital (@ecommerceshares) October 24, 2022 The alternative might have meant rolling blackouts. Fortunately the country cannot hoard any more gas as its caverns are bursting at the seams along with those in the rest of Europe.