Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Europe's economic crisis deepened Monday as Russia further squeezed energy supplies to the continent, with German electricity prices soaring 23%. European natural gas prices surge 36% after Russia ...
January gas supplied by Russia to Europe was 1.7b m3 compared with 13b m3 average per month for the 2021 year. [32] The price of natural gas in Europe fell to an 18-month low in mid February of €49pmh with gas storage across the European Union at 65% capacity, well above the average of 45% at this time of year. [33]
In 2017, energy products accounted for around 60% of the EU's total imports from Russia. [25] 30% of the EU's petroleum oil imports and 39% of total gas imports came from Russia in 2017. For Estonia, Poland, Slovakia and Finland, more than 75% of their imports of petroleum oils originated in Russia.
European gas prices hit a new record high on Tuesday after a pipeline that brings Russian gas to Germany switched to flow east, a move the Kremlin said had no political backdrop, while two big ...
Nord Stream 2 (German – English mixed expression for "North Stream 2"; Russian: Северный поток — 2) is a 1,234-kilometre-long (767 mi) natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany running through the Baltic Sea, [ 2 ] financed by Gazprom and several European energy companies. Feasibility studies began in 2011 to expand the Nord ...
European benchmark gas futures jumped as much as 5.7% Friday to €56 ($59) per megawatt hour, before falling back slightly later in the day. Prices have risen 44% since Friday last week.
2022–2023 Russia–European Union gas dispute. Russia cut the flow of natural gas by more than half in June because it said it could not get a part seized by the Canadian government because of sanctions. [2] Russia halted gas flows on 11 July for annual maintenance for 10 days and resumed flows on 21 July.
U.S. natural gas prices were relatively stable at around (2006 US) $30/Mcm in both the 1930s and the 1960s. Prices reached a low of around (2006 US) $17/Mcm in the late 1940s, when more than 20 percent of the natural gas being withdrawn from U.S. reserves was vented or flared.