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Germany to stop gas storage levy on transit from 2025

  • Market: Natural gas
  • 30/05/24

The German government has agreed to stop charging its gas storage levy on natural gas exiting the German grid at border interconnection points from 2025, permanent secretary in the German economy and climate ministry Sven Giegold said this morning.

The government intends to submit a law to parliament to change its gas storage levy so that it is no longer charged on gas transiting the country, in order to support stronger integration between European energy markets, Giegold said ahead of an energy council meeting in Brussels this morning. It had "never been Germany's intention to inhibit the integration between markets with this levy" or to disturb countries' efforts to gain independence from Russia, he said. Germany continued to support European gas supply diversification, for example through expanding its LNG import infrastructure, also in the interest of its neighbours, Giegold said.

The German government had introduced the levy to recoup the cost of purchasing 50TWh of gas on the spot market without hedging it forward in summer 2022 to fill storage sites ahead of the winter. But falling prices meant that market area manager THE could only recover about a third of the amount spent through gas sales, leaving a loss of about €6.3bn ($6.8bn) to be levied on all gas exiting the German grid.

The gas storage neutrality charge will continue to exist for domestic consumers as the "public good will continue to require financing", but Giegold said he did not want to pre-empt the legislative process with any details of future levy-setting methodologies. The recently-announced hike of the levy to €2.50/MWh for the second half of this year remains a legal requirement under the law currently in force. A change from the start of 2025 is an exceptionally quick turnaround in democratic legislation, Giegold said.

Germany's central and eastern European neighbours — especially Austria, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia — had previously pointed out large negative impacts of the levy for their diversification efforts away from Russian gas, and had asked the commission to act against the levy. Energy commissioner Kadri Simson, who had previously criticised the levy for "putting energy solidarity at risk", said this morning that she had sent several letters to German economy and climate minister Robert Habeck on the matter and expected Germany to abolish the levy on transit flows.


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Australia re-elects renewable-focused Labor party

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Mexico bets on new contract model to lift gas output


02/05/25
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02/05/25

Mexico bets on new contract model to lift gas output

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Shell says can deliver solid returns below $50/bl


02/05/25
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02/05/25

Shell says can deliver solid returns below $50/bl

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Shell’s 1Q European gas production up


02/05/25
News
02/05/25

Shell’s 1Q European gas production up

London, 2 May (Argus) — Shell's European gas production for sale in January-March slightly stepped up on the year, but the company expects works to limit global oil and gas production this quarter. Shell produced 24.9mn m³/d in the first quarter, up from 24.8mn m³/d a year earlier but below the 25.2mn m³/d in fourth-quarter 2024. Shell has stakes in UK and Dutch fields, as well as a 17.8pc share in Norway's Ormen Lange field and an 8.1pc stake in the giant Troll field. Output from the two Norwegian fields was down on the year in January-February, the latest months for which data are available. Ormen Lange produced 19.8mn m³/d in January-February, down from 22.6mn m³/d a year earlier. Troll production averaged 123.6mn m³/d over those two months, also down from 126.2mn m³/d a year earlier. Shell's integrated gas business was the company's top performing segment with profits of $2.8bn, slightly higher on the year. Lighter maintenance at the Pearl gas-to-liquids plant in Qatar supported production, but unplanned works and weather constraints in Australia left the company's LNG volumes at 6.6mn t in January-March from 7.6mn t a year earlier, Shell said. Meanwhile, Shell's upstream division posted $2.1bn in profit, down 8.5pc on the year earlier but double compared with the fourth quarter 2024. The segment was hit with a $509mn tax bill related to the UK's Energy Profits Levy in the first quarter, partially offset by gains from asset sales. Across the entire company, Shell reported first-quarter profits adjusted for inventory valuation effects and one-off items of $5.6bn, surpassing analysts' expectations of $5.3bn . Shell's first-quarter worldwide oil, liquids and gas production was 2.84mn boe/d, down from 2.91mn boe/d a year earlier but up from 2.82mn boe/d in the previous quarter. The company expects lower oil and gas production this quarter in a 2.45mn-2.71mn boe/d range because of maintenance across its integrated gas portfolio and an absence of volumes from its SPDC business in Nigeria, which Shell sold off in March. By Aleksandra Godlewska and Jon Mainwaring Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Shell’s 1Q profit falls but beats expectations


02/05/25
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02/05/25

Shell’s 1Q profit falls but beats expectations

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