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EU Received 300 Shipments of LNG from Russia Since Beginning of Ukraine War
Deliveries in 2023 could surpass 2022 Last year’s trend continues in 2023. During the first six months – data current through June 12 – of this year the pace of deliveries to Spain and especially Belgium has further accelerated, while supplies to France have declined slightly. One notable exception is the Netherlands, which phased out Russian LNG deliveries at one of its two import terminals. The storage of Russian LNG is no longer permitted at the EemsEnergyTerminal (EET) in Eemshaven, according to a government spokesperson. Only the Gate facility in the west of the country, near Rotterdam, now receives shipments from Russia. As of mid-June the Netherlands have only received five shipments this year, contrasting to 21 deliveries in 2022.
Legal hurdles to end inflow EU institutions and member states have been discussing a possible change to these “legal obligations” allowing member states to limit the inflow of Russian LNG. While comments by EU and member state officials suggest that the issue is one of priority, no concrete actions have been announced. Consultations on a broader European natural gas package began earlier this month.Almost all supply to Europe occurs under long-term contracts, some running well into the next decade or beyond, explains Viktor Katona, analyst at Kpler, a data and analytics firm for commodity markets.
“All of Yamal LNG volumes are allocated under long-term offtake agreements: Total Energies (4 million tons per annum), Naturgy (2.5 mtpa), Shell (0.9 mtpa), Gazprom (3 mtpa), Novatek (2.5mtpa), and PetroChina (3 mtpa),” explains Katona. It is not clear how easy it will be to unroll these contracts, should the EU or member states wish to reduce the inflow of LNG from Yamal. Spokespersons for Belgium, France, and Spain did not respond to requests for comment on the matter. “European companies have been mostly taking home volumes under their long-term contracts. Considering the offtake agreements started mid-2018 and all run until 2038-2045, it would be legally difficult to apply grandfather clauses on these,” concludes Katona.
Meanwhile, the Netherlands has shown that it is feasible to begin to extricate oneself from the dependency on Russian LNG and gradually reduce imports. “We made the arrangements that no LNG from Russia was allowed to be stored at EET. LNG from Russia was 30 percent of the total LNG import and is now down to 15 percent,” explains Pieter ten Bruggencate, Spokesperson for the Ministry for Climate and Energy Policy, to HNN. The government’s efforts have proven effective with deliveries during the first six months of this year down around 50 percent over 2022.The question of how to address Russian LNG imports to Europe will remain acute as Novatek's next LNG project, Arctic LNG 2, will come online later this year. A storage hub, intended to facilitate the flow of LNG to the continent, also arrived in the Arctic this week.
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LMB-BML 2007 Webmaster & designer: Cmdt. André Jehaes - email andre.jehaes@lmb-bml.be
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