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Germany's private LNG terminal worries state operator may damage it

Personal German melted gas (LNG) terminal operator Deutsche ReGas states the potentially lower prices used by stateowned Deutsche Energy Terminal to draw in purchasers are a danger to its business.

Germany's quest to increase LNG capacity for regasification on its shores has magnified as it looks for to change pipeline gas no longer coming from Russia, its previous main provider.

Drifting storage and regasification units (FSRUs) were constructed at various coastal places in record time.

But with underground gas caverns well completed Europe, and with LNG terminal overcapacity, it is getting tougher to bring in freights to the new infrastructure.

Given that Christmas 2024, we have been facing unequal competitors with DET, ReGas Chief Executive Ingo Wagner stated to press reporters, adding that state rules require that DET needs to not offer slots at costs below costs.

ReGas complains that state-subsidised DET can pay for to go listed below the cost that would be thought about the very little level to recover costs.

As a private company, ReGas says it can not match the levels.

ReGas's Deutsche Ostsee terminal is the only facility in the Baltic Sea and is important for delivering gas to nations such as the Czech Republic and Slovakia in the future, which are reversing pipeline instructions after Russian products dried up.

A pipeline deal between Russia and Ukraine ended on Jan. 1 and U.S. President Donald Trump is targeting Europe to export more LNG.

DET will hold short-term auctions for regasification capability at Wilhelmshaven and Brunsbuettel in the North Sea on Feb. 4, 5 and 6.

Its operations were authorized under European Commission state help guidelines last December.

Germany hurried through building Wilhelmshaven, Brunsbuettel and Lubmin, near Mukran and its leader, from the winter of 2022 onwards and rented ships as part of its emergency situation actions to the decrease of Russian gas after the war in Ukraine.

DET informed Reuters that short-term auctions in December had assisted make sure supply security at all times, amidst soft scheduling interest.

We are adhering to the regulative requirements for the marketing of regas capacity for our terminals, a DET. representative said.

The auctions are for services around unloading. regasification, send-out and storage.

(source: Reuters)