Netherlands Approves Stricter Caps at Europe’s Largest Gas Field

Netherlands Approves Stricter Caps at Europe’s Largest Gas Field

(Bloomberg) -- Europe’s largest natural gas field may only produce less than half of what it did four years earlier as the Netherlands seeks to reduce the risk of earthquakes linked to output.

Production at the Groningen gas field in the northeast will be capped at 24 billion cubic meters a year (847 billion cubic feet) from Oct. 1 after a majority in parliament Thursday backed Economy Minister Henk Kamp’s five-year output proposal. The government can review output annually, opening the door for further reductions from 53 billion cubic meters in the 2012-2013 gas year, equal to more than 10 percent of annual EU consumption.

Henk Kamp

Photographer: Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images

“This annual review is a new development but a prudent and understandable one in the context of the seismic concerns,” Craig Lowrey, a consultant at UX Energy Services in Ipswich, England, said by e-mail. “Seeking stability for five years is likely to be welcome news to the markets given the extent of the declines in output seen over the last two years.”

Production from Groningen, operated by a venture of Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp., was first limited in 2014 amid warnings small tremors around the site would become worse with further extraction. The Dutch Economy Ministry has ordered several more cuts as some residents push to close the field entirely.

QuickTake Q&A: Earth-Shaking Woes at Europe’s Biggest Gas Field

Gas prices in the Netherlands, Europe’s largest traded market for the fuel, rose after the decision. Dutch gas for summer delivery gained as much as 2.7 percent by 4:58 p.m. in London. A motion for the cap to last only one year didn’t pass.

Get live Stock market updates, Business news, Today’s latest news, Trending stories, and Videos on NDTV Profit.
GET REGULAR UPDATES