- Dozens of LNG tankers are idling off Europe’s coast as they hold out for higher prices, per the FT.
- Combined, the 30-plus ships are carrying natural gas worth $2 billion, according to Vortexa data.
- European natural gas prices have fallen since summer, but traders anticipate they will rise again.
More than 30 tankers carrying liquefied natural gas are idling off Europe’s coast as traders hold out for higher market prices, the Financial Times reported.
The ships, which combined are carrying LNG worth $2 billion, are at sea around north-west Europe and the Iberian peninsula, the FT reported Friday, citing Vortexa data.
“LNG vessels have been queued up outside European LNG receiving terminals, chasing what they expected to be the premium market for this LNG,” Vortexa’s Felix Booth told the FT.
Booth said it will likely take another month for the tankers to find a terminal to offload their cargo, as access has become more restricted as storage sites have filled up.
“For now, these vessels have incentive to hold positions,” he said, as the expectation is that colder weather will ultimately drive up demand for energy and in turn drive up prices.
Prices for natural gas in Europe have fallen back from their August highs, when they topped 346 euros per megawatt-hour thanks to concerns that Russia’s cuts to its export flows would cause an energy crisis in the winter.
Milder-than-usual temperatures, reduced gas consumption and Europe’s storage sites rapidly filling up ahead of winter have all helped pull prices lower.
But the traders keeping their tankers offshore are betting prices will gain in the months ahead, as colder weather sets in and lifts heating demand, and as gas is released from storage.