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Gas15-May-2025
By Jennifer Sanin and Tatjana
Jovanovic
LONDON (ICIS)–The EU’s choice to oust
dissenters from the decision-making process on
a Russian gas ban is an act of political
desperation.
Recently, the European Commission presented its
plan to end Russian fossil fuel imports by 2027
but failed to offer much detail until the
release of legislative proposals in June.
While decisions on sanctions require a
unanimous vote to pass, legislation can pass
via “qualified majority”.
Restricting trade with a country seems like the
definition of a sanction, but the EU’s choice
to make it a legislative issue conveniently
sidelines the inevitable dissent from less
compliant member states.
Both
Slovakia and
Hungary , whose main gas supplier is
Russia, have vehemently rejected the proposal
and are seeking joint action to counter it.
More and more eastern European populations
further impoverished by high energy costs are
turning against the EU’s stance on Russian
energy.
The common scare tactic of Russian gas supply
weaponization can not be wielded against these
states, as they are clearly more concerned
about the EU cutting off their access to
affordable energy than Russian President
Vladimir Putin himself.
Intelligence agencies and media outlets can
blame the trend on “Russian interference” all
they like, but reliance on costly and volatile
global LNG is hardly conducive to a stable
energy price for consumers.
“Not being supplied by Russian gas means
getting dependent on the US, which is not
really reliable at the moment,” one trader
said.
“Hard to get the gas over unless you reverse
flow from west EU,” another trader added. “And
relying on LNG as well… so I get [their
concerns].”
Indeed, the cost of firm annual transit from
Netherlands to Slovakia totals €3.27/MWh
compared with just €1.36/MWh to pull on
Hungary’s Turkstream volumes, which themselves
are contracted at a discount to the TTF.
A moral argument?
Diversity of supply ought to mean just that: a
mix of all possible sources, including the huge
fuel-rich land just over the border.
Business itself does not necessarily bend to
geopolitical shifts. For a long time after
Russia’s invasion, Ukraine continued making
money off transiting its aggressor’s gas to
Europe.
Plenty of US and European trading partners
either violate human rights outright or hold
deeply opposing cultural values – China’s
oppression of Uyghurs, Saudi Arabia’s war in
Yemen, Sharia law in Qatar to give a few
examples.
Following the logic of doing business
exclusively with “morally righteous” partners,
Europe would have to limit its trade to only
include secular Western states.
The outcome of the war can not rationally be
linked to eastern Europe’s consumption of
Russian gas, and the ban is blatantly an
ideological one.
Cheap Russian gas?
One riposte to the concept of “cheap” Russian
gas is to say that Gazprom supplied European
companies under legacy oil-linked contracts,
which eventually turned out more expensive than
hub pricing amid gas market liberalisation.
Already in 2015, many of these legacy contracts
were re-written to
incorporate TTF linkage .
Then in 2018, the Russian energy giant adapted
by selling excess volumes on an
electronic sales platform at TTF-linked
prices, which ICIS covered
extensively at the time.
Anyway, specific contract terms are a
distraction from the crucial point that Russian
pipeline gas is a flexible and abundant source
of supply that would ease volatility across
Europe, not just regional hubs.
Slovak energy company
argued that lack of infrastructure capacity
makes eastern Europe more vulnerable to supply
crunches.
This could be addressed with infrastructure
expansion but uncertainty around Europe’s
fossil fuel phase-out and a possible
Russia-Ukraine peace deal makes such projects
hard to plan.
Speculators’ paradise
One could also ask who stands to gain from such
a volatile energy price environment while
European consumers and industry suffer.
The total removal of Europe’s most flexible
supply source would almost inevitably expose
the markets to price swings, and a volatile
environment is most attractive for wealthy
speculative traders.
TTF front-month at-the-money
implied volatility – the option market’s
measure of a contract’s future price swings –
skyrocketed after the invasion and has hovered
over 50% ever since.
That is much higher than the benchmark contract
for most liquid commodity, Brent crude M+2, and
therefore more lucrative for high-risk
speculative traders. At-the-money July ’25
Brent implied volatility stood at around 30% on
14 May.
The market impact of heightened speculative
activity is a
hotly debated topic , specifically its
impact on
inflating prices (in the case of net
longs)– but most sources polled by ICIS agree
it can exacerbate volatility.
This begs the question… who are the winners of
the EU’s political grandstanding?
While it is no secret that eastern Europe is
often used as a playground for West versus
East, this latest proposal may have gone a step
too far.
This article reflects the personal views of
the authors and is not necessarily an
expression of ICIS’s position.
Crude Oil15-May-2025
BANGKOK (ICIS)– South Korea’s petrochemical
production is projected to decline by 1.4% in
2025, with export volumes expected to contract
by 4.2%, while domestic demand is forecast to
increase by 2.3%.
Industry to remain export-driven
Domestic consumption to reverse 6.6%
contraction in 2024
Economic recovery likely limited
“The operating rate is expected to decline
slightly due to continued oversupply and the
rapid pace of production expansion from China,”
the Korea Petrochemical Industry Association
(KPIA) said in a report prepared for the Asia
Petrochemical Industry Conference (APIC) 2025.
The conference is being held in Bangkok,
Thailand on 15-16 May.
“[With] trade protectionism spreading
worldwide, it is expected that operating rates
will be further adjusted due to a decline in
[exports],” KPIA said.
Full-year petrochemical production for 2025 is
expected to shrink to 20.7 million tons, as
economic recovery is expected to be limited,
amid an oversupply in China.
However, purchases are expected to gradually
pick up, especially in major demand centers.
South Korea’s petrochemical production in 2024
declined by 1.4% to 21.1 million tons.
Its petrochemical export volumes in
2025 are projected to decline further to
12.3m tons, after shrinking by 3.1% in
2024.
South Korea is a major exporter of synthetic
resins, synthetic fiber and synthetic rubber,
with overseas sales accounting for a
substantial portion of total production of
these products.
S Korea 2025 Petrochemical Industry
Forecasts (in ‘000 tons)
Products
Production
Exports
Exports share to total output (%)
2024 actual export growth (%)
2025 projected export growth (%)
Synthetic resins
14,946
9,533
63.8
-1.1
0.3
Synthetic fibre raw materials
5,193
2,401
46.2
-2.6
-6.1
Synthetic rubber
614
387
63.0
0.6
-2.9
Source: KPIA
“In 2025, the petrochemical industry is
expected to face even more difficult times
ahead … Overall, the export-driven growth trend
is expected to continue,” the KPIA said.
Domestic petrochemical consumption this year is
projected to grow by 2.3% to 9.5m tons,
reversing a 6.6% contraction in 2024.
Due to intensifying competition with low-priced
Chinese products, however, the pace of domestic
demand recovery is expected to be limited,
according to KPIA.
Focus article by Jonathan Yee
Crude Oil15-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Economic growth in the UK
strengthened in the first quarter with GDP
estimated to have grown by 0.7%, according to
official data on Thursday.
The economy accelerated from the previous
quarter when GDP grew by just 0.1%, the Office
for National Statistics (ONS) said in its first
estimate, which is subject to revision.
The rate of growth in Q1 is the strongest in a
year, since the first quarter of 2024 when GDP
grew by 0.9%.
Q1 2024
Q2 2024
Q3 2024
Q4 2024
Q1 2025
0.9%
0.5%
0%
0.1%
0.7%
Growth in Q1 2025 was driven by an increase of
0.7% in the services sector. Production also
grew, by 1.1%, while the construction sector
remained flat, the ONS said.
The Q1 figures were recorded before “Liberation
Day” US trade tariffs were announced at the
start of April, with these likely to be
reflected in future economic data.

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Acrylonitrile15-May-2025
BANGKOK (ICIS)–Sluggish domestic demand
weighed on Japan’s petrochemical industry,
resulting in reduced production volumes in 2024
compared with previous years, according to the
Japan Petrochemical Industry Association
(JPCA).
2024 ethylene output falls 6.3%
Production of five major plastics shrink by
5%
Japan economy forecast to grow by 1.2% in
2025
“Although some crackers in Southeast Asia and
East Asia are reducing production, there are
plans for capacity increases in crackers that
significantly exceed demand in China,” JPCA
said in a report prepared for the Asia
Petrochemical Industry Conference (APIC) 2025.
The conference is being held in Bangkok,
Thailand from 15-16 May.
Operating rates of crackers in Japan are
expected to remain lowered, as with previous
years, JPCA said.
Japan’s ethylene production in 2024 fell 6.3%
year on year to 4.99 million tonnes, as
domestic crackers have operated at below 90% of
capacity since August 2022, with the monthly
average run rate falling below 80% five times
in 2024.
Japan’s real GDP growth rate in 2024 was 0.1%
amid weak exports, neutral growth in private
consumption, and a slight increase in
government consumption.
For the whole of 2024, the country’s total
production of five major plastics – namely,
linear density polyethylene (PE), high density
PE (HDPE), polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS)
and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) – declined to 5.7
million tonnes, lower by 5.2% from 2023.
Production (in thousand
tonnes)
Product
2024
2023
% change
Ethylene
4,989
5,324
-6.3
LDPE
1,160
1,219
-4.8
HDPE
656
665
-1.4
PP
1,935
2,075
-6.8
PS
549
564
-2.7
PVC
1,406
1,496
-6.0
Styrene monomer (SM)
1,297
1,428
-9.2
Ethylene glycol (EG)
276
264
4.6
Acrylonitrile (ACN)
303
341
-11.2
Sources: METI, Japan Styrene Industry
Association (PS, SM) and Vinyl Environmental
Council (PVC)
Domestic demand as ethylene equivalent in 2024
inched up by 1.4% to 3.92 million tonnes,
according to JPCA data.
While the global economy is expected to grow
steadily in 2025, there is a risk of
deterioration in the global economy and a
corresponding decline in demand due to
geopolitical issues, JPCA said, citing Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine, the Israel-Hamas war, as
well as the tariff policy of the US Trump
administration.
The latter has caused costs of raw material
prices to soar, JPCA said.
Meanwhile, Japan’s real GDP growth rate for
2025 is projected to accelerate to 1.2%,
supported by increased exports, sustained
growth in personal consumption, and increases
in capital investment, said JPCA.
Higher wage hikes in 2025 should help boost
domestic consumption, it said.
In the report, JPCA called on the petrochemical
industry to adopt new roles and
responsibilities in achieving carbon neutrality
and advancing a recycling-oriented society.
The report outlined a two-stage timeline:
first, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from
existing facilities by immediately deploying
currently available technologies; and second,
to establish sustainable development goals by
gradually introducing new technologies into
society.
“Not only corporate efforts but … collaboration
and system design throughout the supply chain
are required,” JPCA said.
Focus article by Jonathan Yee
Crude Oil15-May-2025
BANGKOK (ICIS)–External factors continue to
pressure Thailand’s petrochemical industry,
driven by new capacity additions from low-cost
producers, particularly those in the Middle
East, according to a report by the Federation
of Thai Industries, Petrochemical Industry Club
(FTIPC).
Global PE, PP, PX oversupply weigh on Thai
industry
Trade tensions threaten Thailand export
growth
Proposed US tariff hikes could disrupt
supply chains
Despite these obstacles, the industry is on a
gradual recovery path, driven by increasing
demand in key sectors such as food packaging,
pharmaceuticals, and electronics, the FTIPC
said in a report released for the Asia
Petrochemical Industry Conference (APIC) 2025.
The two-day conference in Bangkok, Thailand,
ends on 16 May.
However, domestic consumption remains under
pressure due to high household debt levels,
which could impact the demand for durable goods
and related petrochemical products.
Here is a summary of the FTIPC’s outlook for
petrochemical products produced in Thailand
this year:
Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy
expanded in 2024 by 2.5%, accelerating from the
2.0% growth in 2023.
Household consumption growth over the period
slowed to 4.4% from 6.9% in 2023.
The Bank of Thailand in March said that it
expects Thailand’s economy to grow just above
2.5% in 2025, falling short of earlier
projections, as high household debt and
structural challenges in manufacturing continue
to hinder an uneven recovery.
While signs of recovery are evident, the
industry still grapples with significant
challenges, particularly global oversupply in
polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and
paraxylene (PX), the FTIPC said.
“This oversupply continues to strain profit
margins,” it said.
Additionally, geopolitical tensions, trade
restrictions, and economic slowdowns in major
export markets such as China and Europe pose
further risks to growth.
Thailand is currently facing a 36% tariff on
its exports to the US, with a temporary pause
on these tariffs set to expire in July.
“The United States has raised concerns among
Thai industries, particularly those heavily
dependent on exports, by proposing tariff
increases,” FIPTC said.
“If implemented, these tariff hikes could
disrupt supply chains, elevate production
costs, and pose significant challenges for Thai
exporters,” it added.
“Higher import duties may reduce
competitiveness and profitability, forcing
businesses to reassess their market strategies
and cost structures,” it said.
Looking ahead, Thailand’s petrochemical sector
must navigate a volatile global market while
capitalizing on domestic demand growth.
Strategic investments in feedstock
diversification, sustainability, and advanced
manufacturing are crucial for the sector’s
success.
“To remain competitive, industry leaders will
need to focus on cost optimization, innovation,
and regional collaboration to strengthen their
market position and drive long-term growth,”
the FTIPC said.
Furthermore, Thailand’s PTT Global
Chemical (PTTGC) is set to become the country’s
first chemical producer to integrate
US-imported ethane as an alternative feedstock.
Under the agreement, PTTGC will secure an
annual supply of 400,000 tons of ethane to meet
growing market demand in a highly competitive
environment.
The company expects to begin receiving imported
ethane in 2029.
PTTGC has entered into long-term agreements
with key partners, including Very Large Ethane
Carriers (VLECs) service agreements with parent
firm PTT Public Co (PTT) and Malaysia’s
liquefied gas transportation firm MISC.
Additionally, PTTGC has signed a long-term
terminal service agreement with Thai Tank
Terminal C (TTT) to facilitate the delivery and
storage of ethane at the Map Ta Phut Terminal
in Rayong.
Meanwhile, the Thai plastics industry is facing
growing competition from finished goods
imported from China and competitive supplies
from the Middle East.
This influx of lower-cost products is
intensifying market pressure, potentially
affecting domestic manufacturers in Thailand.
Moreover, China’s oversupply across sectors
like EVs, electronics, and plastics has
impacted manufacturing in Southeast Asia,
including Thailand.
Thailand’s overall polymer consumption has seen
a slight increase last year.
However, Thai converters are facing significant
challenges from geopolitical uncertainties, a
global economic slowdown, and high inflation
rates, exacerbated by a rise in major polymer
imports from China and the Middle East.
Insight article by Nurluqman
Suratman
Thumbnail image: At the Thai-Chinese Rayong
Industrial Zone, located at the east coast of
Thailand on 29 December 2021.
(Xinhua/Shutterstock)
Gas15-May-2025
This article reflects the personal views
of the author and is
not necessarily an expression of
ICIS’s position.
Romanian pro-EU candidate favours free
trade but is less outspoken on clean energy
Polish and Romanian presidential
candidates’ position on Russia could sway EU
policies
Rise of populist parties across CEE could
lead to fragmentation of markets
LONDON (ICIS)– Romanians and Poles will be
heading to the polls on Sunday and their vote
could hardly be more consequential for the
direction of energy markets in central Europe
and arguably the EU as a whole.
Apart from holding presidential elections on
the same day, there are many other notable
similarities.
As mayors of Bucharest and Warsaw, educated
at elite EU universities, Romania’s
presidential candidate Nicusor Dan and his
Polish counterpart Rafal Trzaskowski have
strong pro-EU agendas.
At the opposite end, Romania’s populist
far-right candidate George Simion and
Poland’s Karol Nawrocki prefer to
champion the cause of the EU-disillusioned
grassroots.
But there are also differences.
While Dan and Trzaskowski promote the EU’s
market-based economic model, the Romanian
candidate is less outspoken in favour of
clean forms of generation than his Polish
counterpart.
Simion, on the other hand, embraces economic
nationalism, with a strong emphasis on state
control over natural resources.
He bemoans the abnormal weight of spot
trading in the Romanian gas market, caused
primarily by heavy market regulation and
taxation, but proposes the continuation of
state intervention.
Like Nawrocki, he advocates preserving
coal-fired generation but acknowledges the
role of renewables in the installed capacity
mix.
Perhaps the most critical point in the
candidates’ electoral campaigns remains their
position on Russia.
Unlike Simion, leader of the far right AUR
party, who has been more amenable to a
rapprochement with Moscow, Nawrocki continues
his Law and Justice Party’s anti-Russia
narrative.
Nevertheless, Simion’s recent fleeting trip
to Poland to endorse the conservative
candidate elicited sarcastic remarks from the
Polish prime minister Donald Tusk who said
the encounter ‘had made Russia happy.’
If elected, their position on Russia will
matter to the wider EU market on several
accounts.
In Romania’s case, a Simion win would swell
the chorus of populist eastern European
leaders such as Hungary’s Viktor Orban or
Slovakia’s Robert Fico opposing Russian
sanctions and favouring the resumption of
Russian oil and gas supplies to Europe.
With a standing ban on entering Ukraine and
Moldova, Simion has already expressed
opposition to supporting Ukraine’s war
efforts and insisted on protecting Romania’s
interests rather than supporting neighbouring
countries.
This raises questions about his commitment to
facilitating the expansion of cross-border
electricity and gas interconnections with
Ukraine and Moldova and ultimately threatens
to undermine Kyiv and Chisinau’s EU
membership bids.
Although Nawrocki’s political stance on
Russian fossil imports is unclear it is
equally uncertain whether as an EU sceptic he
would lend support to EU Russian sanctions.
In hindsight, Romania and Poland have
benefited from substantial EU funds,
collectively raking in over €300 billion
since their accession in 2007 and 2004.
Even so, large swathes of the population
remain disillusioned as distortive national
economic policies have been preventing an
equitable distribution of funds.
This is symptomatic of all central and
eastern European countries, where the
population felt left behind, even though
their countries had been net beneficiaries of
EU support since accession.
The emergence of populist movements with
strong nationalist, interventionist and
anti-EU agendas across central and eastern
Europe may not lead to a full breakup of the
bloc but threatens to fragment energy markets
and inject further political instability in
an already volatile environment.
As central and eastern Europe’s largest
countries, the outcome of Sunday’s elections
in Romania and Poland will provide a
tantalizing insight into the direction that
the EU will take and policies that it intends
to pursue in the long term.
Crude Oil15-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Growth in the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) region is expected
to slow sharply to 2.6% in 2025 and 2.7% in
2026 as escalating trade tensions and policy
uncertainty weigh on investment and trade, the
group said in a report released on Thursday.
The region posted a 3.6% growth in 2024.
Economic and trade activity across the 21 APEC
member economies has slowed considerably, with
export volumes projected to barely grow in
2025, according to the new report by the APEC
Policy Support Unit.
Source:
APEC
Forecast export volume growth for the group was
0.4% in 2025, while import volume growth will
be even lower at 0.1%. They represent a sharp
deceleration from 2024, when export and import
volumes grew by 5.7% and 4.3%, respectively.
“From tariff hikes and retaliatory measures to
the suspension of trade facilitation procedures
and the proliferation of non-tariff barriers,
we are witnessing an environment that is not
conducive to trade,” APEC Policy Support Unit
director Carlos Kuriyama said.
“This uncertainty is hurting business
confidence and leading many firms to delay
investments and new product launches until the
situation becomes more predictable,” Kuriyama
added.
While challenges persist, the report highlights
an opportunity for member economies to
strengthen cooperation and build resilience
through structural reforms and open trade.
Kuriyama urged APEC economies to recommit to
cooperation and stability. He noted that
restoring confidence in trade requires not only
easing tensions, but also expanding into new
markets, strengthening supply chain resilience
and improving transparency of trade rules and
procedures.
The report was released ahead of the two-day
Ministers Responsible of Trade Meeting in Jeju,
South Korea, which opened on Thursday.
Crude Oil15-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Saudi energy and chemical
giant Saudi Aramco has signed 34 Memoranda of
Understanding (MoUs) and agreements potentially
worth about $90 billion in total, with major US
companies.
The deals cover a range of fields, including
liquefied natural gas (LNG), fuels, chemicals,
emission-reduction technologies, artificial
intelligence (AI) and other digital solutions,
manufacturing, asset management, short-term
cash investments, and procurement of materials,
equipment, and services, the company said on 14
May.
“Our US-related activities have evolved over
the decades, and now include multi-disciplinary
R&D, the Motiva refinery in Port Arthur,
start-up investments, potential collaborations
in LNG, and ongoing procurement,” Saudi Aramco
president and CEO Amin Nasser said.
“As Aramco pursues an ambitious value-driven
growth strategy, we believe that aligning with
world-class partners supports further
development of our operations, strategic
diversification of our portfolio, industrial
innovation, and ongoing capability development
within the Kingdom,” he added.
The MoUs and agreements signed by Aramco and
its Aramco Group Companies are as follows:
Downstream
Honeywell UOP: MoU related to technology
licensing for an aromatics project.
Motiva: MoU related to an aromatics project
in Port Arthur, subject to a final investment
decision.
Afton Chemical: MoUs related to development
and supply of chemical fuel additives in
pipelines and retail fuel offerings.
ExxonMobil: MoU related to evaluating a
significant upgrade to the SAMREF (Saudi Aramco
Mobil Refinery Company) refinery and expanding
the facility into a world-class integrated
petrochemical complex.
Upstream
Sempra Infrastructure: MoU related to
previously announced HOA (head of agreement)
regarding LNG equity and offtake stake in Port
Arthur LNG 2.
Woodside Energy: Collaboration Agreement to
explore global opportunities, including an
equity interest and LNG offtake from the
Louisiana LNG project. Additionally, both
companies are exploring opportunities for a
potential collaboration in lower-carbon
ammonia.
NextDecade: Final Agreement to purchase 1.2
million tonnes per annum of LNG for a 20-year
term from Train 4 of the Rio Grande LNG
Facility, subject to certain conditions,
including a positive final investment decision
of Train 4.
Technology & innovation
Amazon/AWS (Amazon Web Services):
non-binding Strategic Framework agreement
related to collaboration on digital
transformation and lower-carbon initiatives.
NVIDIA: MoU related to developing advanced
Industrial AI computing infrastructure,
establishing an AI Hub and AI Enterprise
platforms, an Engineering and Robotics Center
of Excellence, training and upskilling, and
collaborating with NVIDIA’s startup ecosystem.
Qualcomm: MoU with Aramco Digital that aims
to explore entry into a strategic collaboration
that will focus on key digital transformation
use cases, leveraging Aramco Digital’s 450
megahertz (MHz) 5G industrial network to
connect intelligent edge devices with on-device
AI capabilities, including smartphones, rugged
industrial devices, robots, drones, cameras,
sensors, and other IoT devices.
Technical Services
Procured Materials and Services: MoUs were
signed to reflect the existing relationships
with strategic US suppliers: SLB, Baker Hughes,
McDermott, Halliburton, Nabors, Helmerich &
Payne, Valaris, NESR (National Energy Services
Reunited), Weatherford, Air Products, KBR,
Flowserve, NOV, Emerson, GE Vernova, and
Honeywell. These suppliers provide
high-standard materials and professional
services that help support Aramco’s projects
and operations.
Strategy & Corporate Development
Guardian Glass: MoU to localize specialty
glass manufacturing for architectural
applications in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Finance
Wisayah asset management agreements with
PIMCO (Pacific Investment Management Co), State
Street Corporation, and Wellington.
Agreements for short-term cash investments
through a unified investment fund, the “Fund of
One,” with BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, Morgan
Stanley, and PIMCO.
Gas14-May-2025
Lower storage targets to apply for 2025,
MEP confirms
These may be enacted in July, if
negotiators can agree a compromise by the end
of June
Next round of talks set for 3 June
BRUSSELS (ICIS)–Revisions to Europe’s gas
storage targets will apply to 2025 once agreed,
with talks likely to wrap up quickly, a MEP
involved in the negotiations confirmed to ICIS
on 14 May.
Jens Geier, who represents the European
Parliament’s centre-left Socialist &
Democratic group in compromise negotiations to
agree the final law, told ICIS the intention
was to implement the rules for the current gas
storage filling season.
Speaking at a policy debate on affordable
energy convened by Energy Traders Europe in
Brussels, Geier said the majority of lawmakers
agreed on a need to avoid sending market
signals about when to buy gas.
“You don’t have to be a socialist to believe
that when Germany has to buy, it has to fill up
[stocks by two more percentage points] for the
first of August, it’s an invitation to raise
prices,” Geier said, talking about speculation
over changing filling targets.
ICIS assessments have shown a correlation
between agreement in each step of the revision
process and the spreads between the Dutch TTF
Q3 ’25 and front-winter contracts.
The discount averaged €0.548/MWh below Winter
’25 between 9-23 April, correlating with
details of the Council position. The discount
then widened to €0.955/MWh from 24 April-7 May,
after the ITRE committee vote suggested a
speedy resolution to negotiations.
This is in stark contrast with the first three
months of 2025, when the Dutch TTF Q3 ’25 held
an average premium of €2.769 over Winter ’25.
TRILOGUE TALKS
A delegation from the Parliament began
so-called trilogue negotiations on 13 May, with
EU countries, represented by the Council of the
EU, and with the European Commission also
attending.
The talks aim to find a compromise between
positions adopted by the Council and the
Parliament.
Geier said the first round of discussions went
well and that co-legislators were like-minded
about not needing the “harsh regulation” of 90%
filling targets.
“We can believe in the traders that they will
provide security of supply,” Geier said,
calling for trust in the market backed by
penalties if it failed to deliver.
Geier told the panel he thought a maximum of
two more rounds of talks at political level
would be needed to agree a deal, saying most of
the work would be done at technical level.
He also said he hoped the deal could be
concluded before Poland’s Council presidency
concludes in June, telling ICIS he hoped the
final deal could be endorsed by the full
parliament in July.
An EU source confirmed the next discussions
would take place on 3 June, after a very
positive first round.
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Contact us to learn how we can support you as you transact today and plan for tomorrow.
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