European natural gas futures were little changed in after-hours trade Wednesday, trimming earlier losses but still closing lower as easing geopolitical risk around the Strait of Hormuz offset lingering supply concerns.
Dutch TTF front-month fell 0.129% to 41.715 euros ($48.35) per megawatt hour, while UK NBP front-month declined 0.252% to 99.15 British pence ($1.33) per therm.
Trading Economics said the prospect of reopened maritime traffic has materially reduced fears of prolonged Persian Gulf supply disruptions.
Bloomberg reported that a draft 14-point US-Iran memorandum of understanding outlines reopening the strait within 30 days of signing, with a Geneva meeting scheduled for Friday. The draft reportedly calls for lifting naval restrictions, restoring commercial shipping, and requiring mine clearance and removal of navigation obstacles.
QatarEnergy is moving LNG tankers back toward Ras Laffan ahead of a potential restart once safe passage is secured, Energy News Beat reported. It said vessel data shows several Qatar-linked LNG carriers en route, with others idling in the Gulf of Oman awaiting transit clearance.
Regarding weather, Atmospheric G2 in a Wednesday social media post flagged a persistent heat dome over Europe into early July, with no clear pattern shift until mid-July, pointing to sustained cooling demand and potential disruption to energy supplies.
Gas Infrastructure Europe data shows EU inventories at 45.03% of capacity versus 53.78% a year earlier and well below the 59.3% five-year average, according to the Swiss Federal Office of Energy.