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Europäischer Gaspreis steigt weiter – Stars in focus of Ukraine-Krieg • news • opinions

Europäischer Gaspreis steigt weiter – Stars in focus of Ukraine-Krieg • news • opinions

AMSTERDAM (dpa-AFX) – Der Erdgaspreis hat am Dienstag weiter zugelegt in Europe. Rich Terminal Contracts TTF costs 47.05 Euro megawatt power (MWh) for a Monat fare and a Börse in Amsterdam and 15 Cents more than Montag. Among them is the best Anstieg in Folge, which has a value of over 7.8 Prozent. Der Erdgaspreis was present in the Nähe of Jahreshochs.

Beobachter benefited from the best investments available in Russia’s Gas Exporters Krieg in Ukraine. Ukrainian Streitkräfte participated in the Battles of Generalstabs and Ammunition in Brjansk, Grenz District, Russia. With the new generation of Militars in Kiev, it was seen that ATACMS-Raketen turned into a new word in the USA. The United States was Ukraine’s first major economy, bringing together the Waffen and the 300 Kilometers of Reichweite and Ziele in Russia.

Gasnachfrage in Europe will continue until 2022 Niveau, with the large Kursanstiege gesorgt hatte of Ukraine-Krieg, one of the solid experts of the Oxford Institute for Energy Research. Aber die jüngste Preiserholung “I think a European Gasmarkt is a new starting point for the Ukrainian-Krise bleibt.”

In the next forecast, considering the temperature and seasonally high temperatures, Nachfrage and Heizwärme dämpfen könnte. Derweil finished the Gasspeicher in 91st place in Europe. Der Wert is first listed under Fünfjahresdurchschnitt with European Gas Infrastructure Data from the Energy Crisis in 2022./la/jsl

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European gas rose for a fourth straight day as traders monitored developments in Russia’s war against Ukraine after Kiev launched its first long-range missile strike.

Benchmark futures gained as much as 1.1% and were near one-year highs after early morning volatility. The country carried out its first attack with an ATACMS missile on a border area on Russian territory, RBC Ukraine reported, citing an official from the country’s army.

“Gas demand in Europe remains well below pre-crisis levels,” senior research fellows Bill Farren-Price, Anouk Honore and Jack Sharples of the Oxford Institute for Energy Research said in a report. But the latest price rise “is a timely reminder” that the European gas market remains fundamentally vulnerable to the aftershocks of the Ukraine crisis, even years after the initial supply shortage, they wrote.

At the same time, some forecasts indicate that temperatures this weekend will rise above seasonal norms, which could limit heating demand. Data from the European Gas Infrastructure shows that storage facilities in the region are currently around 91% full, falling below the five-year average for the first time since the energy crisis peaked in 2022.