Commodities April 23, 2026 04:40 AM

European gas edges higher as chill and Iran tensions lift risk premium

TTF front-month rises after colder forecasts and Strait of Hormuz developments

By Maya Rios
European gas edges higher as chill and Iran tensions lift risk premium

European wholesale gas prices climbed as forecasts for colder weather combined with renewed geopolitical strain linked to US-Iran talks. The benchmark Dutch front-month contract at the TTF hub rose to 45.40 euros per megawatt hour, reflecting a modest intraday gain amid continued uncertainty over shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and the status of peace negotiations.

Key Points

  • Dutch TTF front-month contract rose 1.85 euros to 45.40 euros/MWh, a 4.2% daily gain.
  • Colder weather forecasts and Iran's seizure of two ships in the Strait of Hormuz were cited as drivers of the price uptick, affecting power, utilities, shipping, and wholesale gas markets.
  • The EU benchmark gas contract had previously fallen about 39% from a March 19 peak of 74 euros/MWh due to optimism over potential peace talks.

Wholesale natural gas in Europe moved higher on Thursday as traders responded to a mix of weather and geopolitical signals that lifted near-term risk perceptions in the market.

The Dutch front-month contract at the Title Transfer Facility (TTF) rose by 1.85 euros to settle at 45.40 euros per megawatt hour, an intraday increase of 4.2%.

Market participants cited two immediate drivers. First, forecasts pointing to colder weather in parts of Europe increased expectations for near-term heating demand. Second, tensions surrounding US-Iran interactions escalated when Iran seized two ships in the Strait of Hormuz, tightening its control over the strategic waterway.

The seizure followed an announcement by US President Donald Trump that he was indefinitely calling off attacks, with no indication that peace talks would resume. That sequence of events appears to have prompted traders to reassess the probability of supply disruption or higher premiums for shipping through the region, contributing to the upward price move.

Price context is important: the benchmark EU gas contract had fallen roughly 39% from a peak of 74 euros per megawatt hour recorded on March 19. That earlier decline was driven by market optimism around the potential for peace negotiations. The latest developments have partially reversed that sentiment, at least in the short term.

Because the drivers cited by market participants are primarily short-term - weather variability and immediate geopolitical actions - the recent price uptick reflects shifts in near-term risk assessment rather than a confirmed change in underlying supply fundamentals. The degree to which prices will continue to move depends on the evolution of weather and any further developments in the Strait of Hormuz or in diplomatic engagement.


Sector implications

  • Power generation and utilities - Potentially higher gas burn for heating during colder spells could raise costs for gas-fired generation and utilities.
  • Shipping and midstream - Increased control of the Strait of Hormuz introduces uncertainty for tanker movements and maritime logistics tied to energy shipments.
  • Commodities and wholesale gas markets - Near-term risk premiums have pushed benchmark gas pricing modestly higher.

Risks

  • Weather uncertainty - Colder forecasts can increase near-term heating demand, pressuring gas supplies and prices, with impacts on power generation and utilities.
  • Geopolitical tension in the Strait of Hormuz - The seizure of two ships and tighter control of the waterway raises the risk premium for shipping and energy logistics, affecting midstream and commodities markets.
  • Unclear diplomatic outlook - With US President Donald Trump indefinitely calling off attacks and no sign that peace talks will resume, the future trajectory of negotiations remains uncertain, leaving market sentiment vulnerable to developments.

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