Zürcher Nachrichten - Germany races to stockpile gas before winter

EUR -
AED 3.880909
AFN 72.133982
ALL 98.219059
AMD 410.988321
ANG 1.904451
AOA 964.156087
ARS 1059.070394
AUD 1.624703
AWG 1.899252
AZN 1.794399
BAM 1.956722
BBD 2.133605
BDT 126.279489
BGN 1.951872
BHD 0.398226
BIF 3120.970268
BMD 1.056608
BND 1.415607
BOB 7.328661
BRL 6.101591
BSD 1.056728
BTN 89.240574
BWP 14.376773
BYN 3.458129
BYR 20709.512111
BZD 2.130064
CAD 1.479298
CDF 3032.464389
CHF 0.932367
CLF 0.037284
CLP 1028.745251
CNY 7.650367
CNH 7.652265
COP 4647.806218
CRC 537.168308
CUC 1.056608
CUP 28.000106
CVE 110.31697
CZK 25.294147
DJF 188.168645
DKK 7.459355
DOP 63.63998
DZD 140.788805
EGP 52.310928
ERN 15.849116
ETB 130.060463
FJD 2.396017
FKP 0.833998
GBP 0.836336
GEL 2.879274
GGP 0.833998
GHS 16.833408
GIP 0.833998
GMD 75.01893
GNF 9107.290383
GTQ 8.158075
GYD 220.974099
HKD 8.223736
HNL 26.699578
HRK 7.537057
HTG 138.815395
HUF 407.881228
IDR 16767.995351
ILS 3.963071
IMP 0.833998
INR 89.187626
IQD 1384.252112
IRR 44475.26225
ISK 145.896341
JEP 0.833998
JMD 167.598955
JOD 0.749456
JPY 162.828006
KES 136.566823
KGS 91.330801
KHR 4292.143866
KMF 491.058152
KPW 950.946584
KRW 1473.413085
KWD 0.324928
KYD 0.880615
KZT 524.371916
LAK 23169.572877
LBP 94629.966343
LKR 307.444835
LRD 192.320601
LSL 19.1055
LTL 3.119888
LVL 0.639132
LYD 5.154428
MAD 10.557874
MDL 19.205047
MGA 4939.467195
MKD 61.489477
MMK 3431.820791
MNT 3590.353114
MOP 8.471591
MRU 42.055812
MUR 48.900059
MVR 16.334818
MWK 1832.363214
MXN 21.400544
MYR 4.7262
MZN 67.543689
NAD 19.1055
NGN 1772.870952
NIO 38.88832
NOK 11.631994
NPR 142.785319
NZD 1.793919
OMR 0.406815
PAB 1.056728
PEN 4.010189
PGK 4.252003
PHP 62.210425
PKR 293.65634
PLN 4.333923
PYG 8229.87704
QAR 3.853816
RON 4.976469
RSD 116.996079
RUB 106.268817
RWF 1453.484727
SAR 3.966847
SBD 8.843299
SCR 14.355826
SDG 635.551951
SEK 11.58964
SGD 1.415553
SHP 0.833998
SLE 23.932117
SLL 22156.541444
SOS 603.90164
SRD 37.409187
STD 21869.647366
SVC 9.246356
SYP 2654.758547
SZL 19.10054
THB 36.523739
TJS 11.232692
TMT 3.698127
TND 3.329569
TOP 2.474681
TRY 36.519852
TTD 7.175584
TWD 34.257869
TZS 2804.217982
UAH 43.625952
UGX 3890.832945
USD 1.056608
UYU 45.361369
UZS 13552.384437
VES 48.313999
VND 26843.120163
VUV 125.442597
WST 2.949617
XAF 656.284805
XAG 0.033924
XAU 0.000402
XCD 2.855535
XDR 0.803779
XOF 656.266163
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.993657
ZAR 19.118999
ZMK 9510.755112
ZMW 29.192581
ZWL 340.227268
  • CMSC

    -0.0040

    24.62

    -0.02%

  • AZN

    0.4450

    63.835

    +0.7%

  • BTI

    0.2100

    36.89

    +0.57%

  • RIO

    0.0800

    62.2

    +0.13%

  • NGG

    0.6950

    63.595

    +1.09%

  • GSK

    -0.2850

    33.405

    -0.85%

  • BP

    -0.3750

    29.045

    -1.29%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4400

    59.75

    -0.74%

  • BCC

    -3.4700

    138.07

    -2.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    6.7

    -2.24%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.42

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.24

    +0.08%

  • RELX

    0.1100

    45.15

    +0.24%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.87

    -0.56%

  • BCE

    0.1840

    27.414

    +0.67%

  • SCS

    -0.1350

    13.065

    -1.03%

Germany races to stockpile gas before winter
Germany races to stockpile gas before winter / Photo: LENNART PREISS - AFP

Germany races to stockpile gas before winter

Germany's race to wean itself off Russian energy and stockpile enough gas before winter is playing out largely hidden from view, some 1,600 metres (one mile) below ground in the foothills of the Bavarian Alps.

Text size:

Surrounded by rolling farmland near the banks of the river Inn, the former Bierwang natural gas field in Unterreit serves as one of Germany's largest underground gas storage facilities.

Run by German operator Uniper, Bierwang can hold more than 800 million cubic metres of gas -- enough to power the nearby city of Munich for eight months.

Like other storage sites, Bierwang replenishes its stocks between winters, to keep homes heated and Germany's energy-hungry industry humming during the cold months when demand is highest.

But this year, the stakes are higher than ever.

With the war in Ukraine raging and Moscow increasingly seen as an unreliable supplier, governments across Europe are scrambling to store supplies before Moscow decides to reduce the flow of gas, or close the taps altogether.

"The security of supply this winter will depend on two factors: how full the storage facilities are and how much new gas keeps arriving" from abroad, said Sebastian Herold, a professor of energy economics at the Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences.

Russian deliveries will play a "decisive role" in this, Herold said.

Efforts by successive German governments to build closer economic ties with Moscow have left the country hooked on Russian energy imports, a policy now widely seen as misguided.

- Injected into rock -

Fears that a sudden shortage of Russian gas could bring Europe's biggest economy to its knees recently prompted the German government to adopt legislation requiring all of the nation's gas reservoirs to be 90 percent full by November.

Altogether, the above and underground sites have enough capacity to cover 25 percent of Germany's natural gas consumption. They act as a kind of buffer in times of strain on the gas market or if demand spikes during unusually cold weather.

As part of Western sanctions against Moscow, Germany has already agreed to phase out Russian oil and coal. But becoming independent of Russian gas will take longer -- and it won't come cheap as the war in Ukraine sends energy prices soaring.

So far, Berlin has managed to reduce the share of its natural gas supplied by Russia from 55 percent before the invasion, to 35 percent now thanks to increased deliveries from countries like Norway and the Netherlands, and through liquefied natural gas contracts (LNG).

In Bierwang, a network of long-distance pipelines delivers gas to the storage facility. The gas is then compressed before being injected into porous sandstone and stored in natural reservoirs deep below ground.

This method allows vast quantities of natural gas to be stockpiled, but the filling and emptying takes longer than with a second type of underground storage that relies on large caverns in rock salt formations, more commonly found in northern Germany.

"We're on a good way to hopefully deliver the security supply this winter," said Doug Waters, managing director of Uniper Energy Storage, which operates nine storage facilities in Germany.

- Ex-Gazprom unit -

Germany's gas storage sites were 55 percent full on Tuesday, according to the German Federal Network Agency, which posts daily updates online.

The current fill rate is "better than in previous years, but still not sufficient," said the agency's head, Klaus Mueller.

Complicating Germany's challenge to get ready for winter is the situation at the crucial Rehden gas storage facility in the north, the largest in the country.

The German state temporarily took control of the site's owner, Gazprom Germania, in April, a move Berlin said was necessary to ensure energy security as ties with Russia worsened.

Berlin suspects that the unit's former owner, Russia's state-owned Gazprom, deliberately kept supplies low before the invasion of Ukraine to give it leverage over Germany.

Russia last month cut off supplies to Gazprom Germania in retaliation for Berlin's move.

The Rehden facility, with a gas storage capacity of four billion cubic metres, was just 7.95 percent full on Tuesday.

N.Zaugg--NZN