EU urges members to cut gas-storage targets due to Iran war, FT reports
European Union nations are advised to reduce gas storage goals and begin refilling reserves slowly. This move aims to control demand as energy prices surge due to conflict in the Middle East. The European Commission is encouraging flexibility in e...
Energy Commissioner Dan Jorgensen instructed member states to lower the filling target for their gas storage facilities to 80% of capacity, 10 percentage points below the EU's official targets, "as early as possible in the filling season to provide certainty and reassurance to market participants", the newspaper said, citing a letter.
The European Commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters.
Gas prices in Europe surged as much as 35% on Thursday as Iranian and Israeli strikes targeted some of the Middle East's most important gas infrastructure, doing damage that will likely take years to repair.
"The EU's energy supply 'remains relatively protected' Jorgensen said in the letter, calling for a "collective response" to the conflict and warning that "recent developments indicate that it could take longer for (liquefied petroleum gas) production to return to levels known before the crisis", the FT said.
Gas storage allows Europe to meet winter heating and power demand, underpinning the region's energy security.
"We need to make the targets more flexible," an EU official told the newspaper.
The commission instructed governments on Wednesday to be flexible in enforcing EU rules on gas imports, in a move designed to ensure the law enforcing its phase-out of Russian energy does not inadvertently hold up deliveries needed to stabilise supplies during the Iran crisis.
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