Savings of 20 percent necessary: ​​Gas storage tanks are still 88 percent full despite the cold snap

In the past few days, many heaters have been running at full speed in sub-zero temperatures, which is also reflected in the gas storage level.

Savings of 20 percent necessary: ​​Gas storage tanks are still 88 percent full despite the cold snap

In the past few days, many heaters have been running at full speed in sub-zero temperatures, which is also reflected in the gas storage level. The head of the Federal Network Agency, Müller, calms down and says that the storage is still full. Nevertheless, massive gas savings must continue, the winter is still long.

Despite the minus temperatures this month, the gas storage facilities in Germany are currently still around 88 percent full. "This is still a good precaution that Germany has taken," said the head of the Federal Network Agency, Klaus Müller, on Bavarian radio. Nevertheless, he called on consumers to heat "carefully". 20 percent of gas would have to be saved over the entire winter.

"We don't have to call the alarm after two or three weeks like now," said Müller of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung". "But it can't go on like this for the whole of January and February."

In the "Süddeutsche" newspaper, Müller urged close monitoring of the natural gas infrastructure to prevent acts of sabotage. "We would do well to monitor critical infrastructure better than we used to." It was "absolutely right" to put a lot of effort into security around terminals for liquefied natural gas. In addition to extreme cold in Germany or neighboring countries, acts of sabotage are currently the greatest threat to the gas supply.

The winter of the coming year is the even greater challenge, warned Müller. Germany will have to fill the storage tanks without Russian gas in the summer. "People will feel the cost of the energy crisis hard."

The fact that the gas price will eventually drop back to the old level, "nobody expects that in the foreseeable future," said the head of the network agency. Many companies see their future in regenerative hydrogen. "That changed in November. At some point there was a moment when the focus was no longer on the crisis, but on the future." All of his authority's plans are now geared towards 2023 being a year of power grid expansion, expansion of renewable energy and hydrogen.