Commodities June 8, 2026 10:08 AM

European Gas Retreats After Iran, Israel Reportedly Halt Strikes

Prices trimmed earlier gains as reports emerged that Iran and Israel stopped military actions; LNG send-out and Norwegian flows rise

By Derek Hwang
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European benchmark natural gas contracts climbed on Monday but gave back some of their earlier advances after reports that Iran and Israel halted mutual attacks. By 09:47 ET (13:47 GMT) the Dutch TTF front-month contract was up 2.1% at 49.49 euros per megawatt hour, while British futures rose 2.3% to 119.70 pence per therm. Officials and statements cited a pause in hostilities and ongoing diplomatic efforts, even as uncertainties over a potential U.S.-Iran deal and regional shipping routes remain. Additional supply from higher LNG send-out in northwest Europe and a rise in Norwegian export nominations provided further market context.

European Gas Retreats After Iran, Israel Reportedly Halt Strikes
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Key Points

  • By 09:47 ET (13:47 GMT) the Dutch TTF front-month rose 2.1% to 49.49 euros/MWh and British futures climbed 2.3% to 119.70 pence/therm.
  • Iran's armed forces announced an end to military operations against Israel, and U.S. President Donald Trump urged an immediate halt to the attacks while citing progress on ceasefire talks.
  • Northwest Europe LNG send-out was anticipated at 2,164 GWh/d - about 300 GWh/d higher than Friday - and Norwegian export nominations increased to 322 mcm/d.

European natural gas prices opened higher on Monday but trimmed some of their earlier gains after reports indicated Iran and Israel had stopped attacking one another.

By 09:47 ET (13:47 GMT), the front-month contract at the Dutch TTF hub had climbed 2.1% to 49.49 euros per megawatt hour. British natural gas futures increased 2.3% to 119.70 pence per therm.

State-run Fars news agency said Iran's armed forces announced the end of military operations against Israel. U.S. President Donald Trump had urged both countries to suspend renewed strikes after clashes over the weekend extended into Monday and dimmed near-term hopes for a diplomatic agreement between Washington and Tehran.

"Israel and Iran must immediately stop ’shooting,’"

Trump added that Israel and Iran were "looking to do an immediate" ceasefire and that final negotiations on "Peace" were proceeding, "subject to ignorance or stupidity getting in its way." The strikes were the first direct attacks between Iran and Israel since a fragile U.S.-brokered truce took effect in April.

Market attention remains on whether a U.S.-Iran deal can be concluded to end the more than three-month-old war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz - a crucial shipping lane for energy flows. The Strait currently carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas, and uncertainty around the prospect of an agreement has factored into market volatility.

On the supply side, total northwest Europe liquefied natural gas send-out was expected at 2,164 gigawatt hours per day, about 300 GWh/d higher than Friday’s level, Reuters reported. That increase reflected a French terminal returning from maintenance and higher send-out from a facility in the Netherlands over the weekend.

Separately, total Norwegian export nominations were reported at 322 million cubic meters per day, up 10 million cubic meters per day from the previous day, Reuters said. Those higher nominations and the bump in LNG send-out offered market participants additional supply to weigh against geopolitical risks.


Despite the intraday price gains, the market remained sensitive to developments on both the security and supply fronts. Traders and analysts are watching diplomatic signals and physical flows closely as they assess near-term balances for European gas markets.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over whether the U.S. and Iran will reach a deal to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which would affect crude oil and LNG shipping and prices - impacting the energy and shipping sectors.
  • Geopolitical flare-ups despite reported pauses in hostilities could quickly alter market sentiment and drive price volatility in gas and broader energy markets.
  • Variability in LNG send-out and pipeline flows, including maintenance schedules and export nominations, may cause short-term supply swings that affect European gas pricing and utility procurement.

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