Skip to main content
Home
Close Tracker Map 

Main navigation

About
About
About GEM

What is a tracker?

People

Careers

Financial information

Contact us

Our impact

Annual reports

Partners

Who uses GEM research

Support our work

Subscribe

Give now

Funders and donors

Browse data
Trackers
Oil and gas

Oil and gas plants

Oil and gas extraction

Oil infrastructure

Gas infrastructure

Coal

Coal plants

Coal mines

Coal terminals

Renewables and other power

Solar

Wind

Hydropower

Geothermal

Bioenergy

Nuclear

Heavy industry

Iron and steel

Cement and concrete

Iron ore mines

Chemicals inventory

Finance and corporates

Energy ownership

Private equity

Coal project finance

Gas project finance

Energy transition

Integrated power

Global energy transition

Methane emitters

Latin America energy

Energy monitor wiki

Insights and updates
Insights and updates
Insights
Reports and briefings

Updates
Press releases

In the news

Newsletters
Coal Wire

Inside Gas


Search
Download data
Home
March 2023
Press release
Oil and gas

Europe’s LNG import infrastructure glut set to more than double, jeopardizing green goals

Share on:
   

Even as predictions of massive gas supply disruptions from Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine fail to materialize, Europe continues to pursue an uncoordinated and costly build-out that would increase liquified natural gas (LNG) import infrastructure by 136% and further distance the bloc from its long-term climate goals, finds new research from Global Energy Monitor (GEM). 

GEM’s annual review of data in the Europe Gas Tracker [1] shows that as much as 227.2 billion cubic meters per year (bcm/y) of additional LNG terminal import capacity could be added to the bloc at a cost of €22.1 billion. 

By comparison, prior to the war, the EU had a maximum LNG import capacity of 167 bcm/y, which was far from fully utilized, indicating an increase of 136% if the proposed build-out materializes. These developments are at odds with the European Climate Law, adopted in June 2021 to meet the EU’s climate-neutral by 2050 goal while cutting emissions by 55% by 2030.

The report also provides the first comprehensive non-industry review of the large hydrogen gas transmission pipeline network being proposed across the EU that will further entrench the bloc in fossil fuels. Much of this network would be composed of existing or proposed methane gas pipelines that are suggested for conversion in the next two decades, despite the high costs and risks of doing so.

Key points

  • In total, the current proposed EU gas buildout of 227.2 bcm/y would increase the LNG import capacity into the EU by 136% of its current maximum capacity. An additional 60.5 bcm/y of gas pipeline import capacity is also proposed, plus thousands of kilometers of transmission pipelines within the EU.
  • Together this infrastructure is estimated to cost €53.5 billion — €22.1 billion for LNG terminals, and €31.4 billion for pipelines. €4.2 billion is associated with projects already under construction.
  • Greece, Italy, and Germany together account for about 53% of these cost estimates, demonstrating the massive scale of the intended buildout in these countries.
  • Since early 2022, the EU has proposed, revived, or fast-tracked 30 LNG terminal projects.
  • Between January 2022 and February 2023, 35.2 bcm/y of gas import capacity was commissioned among eight LNG terminal projects, plus another 11.1 bcm/y in transmission pipelines.
  • If all 227.2 bcm/y of LNG import capacity were realized, the potential emissions associated with this infrastructure could be nearly 950 million tons CO2 per year. This infrastructure, if commissioned, would be locked in for years and possibly decades, exacerbating an existing gas dependency that is in direct conflict with the bloc’s goal to cut emissions by 55% by 2030. Taken together, and on a yearly basis alone, this buildout would have a carbon footprint over one-third the value of the EU’s 2019 GHG emissions (approximately 3.5 billion tons CO2).

Baird Langenbrunner, Research Analyst for Global Energy Monitor, said, “The EU has a gas addiction, and the treatment for this disease is not to build more gas import infrastructure. The EU needs to reduce fossil fuel demand by continuing to scale up efficiency measures and renewables.” 

Report
Europe Gas Tracker 2023
March 2023

By Baird Langenbrunner, Greig Aitken, Robert Rozansky, Harvey Hassan

Read Report


Subscribe to stay informed about our latest work and updates

Join our mailing list

Subscribe to stay informed about our latest work and updates

Join our mailing list

Footer

Browse data
Oil and gas Coal Renewables and other power Heavy industry Finance and corporates Energy transition
Insights and updates
Reports and briefings Press releases In the news Coal Wire Inside Gas
About
What is a tracker? People Financial information Careers Contact Us
© 2026 Global Energy Monitor
All Rights Reserved
440 N Barranca Ave #2878, Covina, CA 91723
Built by 89up
   