European natural gas futures slip

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European natural gas futures slipped toward €31/MWh on Thursday, hovering near their lowest level since May 2024 as optimism grew around renewed peace efforts in Ukraine.


Following meetings in Washington between U.S. President Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and European leaders, Trump urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to plan a direct summit with Zelenskiy. The prospect of trilateral talks fueled speculation that a ceasefire deal could eventually reopen channels for Russian gas exports, which have been heavily restricted since the start of the war.


While Europe has sharply reduced its reliance on Russian pipeline gas by securing alternative LNG supplies and boosting imports from Norway, the possibility of sanctions easing has introduced the idea that Russian volumes could re-enter global markets. Traders reasoned that such a development could soften competition for LNG cargoes, lowering benchmark prices in Europe.


However, energy analysts caution that political hurdles remain high, and structural changes in Europe’s supply mix mean Russian flows would likely only play a supplementary role even if restrictions were lifted.


Adding to bearish pressure, Norway’s Equinor restarted operations at its Hammerfest LNG terminal — Europe’s largest — after an unplanned weekend outage caused by an overheating transformer. The return of the 4.5 million tonnes-per-year facility has reinforced Europe’s near-term supply buffer, with Norwegian gas already serving as the single largest source of pipeline imports since the Russia–Ukraine war began.


Demand-side factors have also kept prices subdued. Mild summer weather and strong storage levels — with European inventories still tracking well above the five-year average — have limited spot market tightness. Industrial consumption remains sluggish amid broader economic headwinds, reducing pressure on supply.


Looking ahead, gas market volatility will depend heavily on the trajectory of U.S.–Russia–Ukraine talks and on winter demand expectations. If negotiations advance and Russian exports appear closer to returning, futures could see further downside. Conversely, any collapse in talks or unexpected supply disruptions — whether from Norway, LNG logistics, or extreme weather — could quickly reverse the bearish momentum.