Asia's LNG imports recover, drawing cargoes from needy Europe: Russell
XLE•Europe storage gap adds pressure
The switching of U.S. cargoes to Asia has resulted in Europe's total LNG imports falling to an expected 6.90 million tons in July, the lowest since September 2024 and down from 8.72 million tons in July 2025.
The drop in LNG imports comes as Europe's refilling of natural gas inventories falls well behind schedule, with data from energy analyst John Kemp showing a storage deficit of 158 terawatt hours by July 7, about 22% wider than the 10-year seasonal average.
This means that European utilities are likely going to have to bid up spot LNG prices to levels that knock Asian buyers such as China and India out of the market.
It also means the longer Qatar's LNG remains effectively unavailable amid the Iran conflict, the more likely spot prices will climb.



