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    Home > Top Stories > Germany’s gas crisis in charts: Pipeline repair, and then what?
    Top Stories

    Germany’s gas crisis in charts: Pipeline repair, and then what?

    Published by Wanda Rich

    Posted on July 11, 2022

    3 min read

    Last updated: February 5, 2026

    This image shows the pipes of the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline, essential for transporting Russian gas to Germany. As maintenance halts flows, Germany faces a potential gas crisis impacting its economy and energy supply.
    Pipes of the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline, critical for Germany's gas supply during its crisis - Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:energy marketeconomic growthfinancial crisisinvestmentsustainability

    By Vera Eckert and Tom Sims

    FRANKFURT (Reuters) – The flow of gas from Russia to Germany through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline stopped on Monday as a planned 10-day maintenance period began. The question is: Will flows then resume?

    Germany, Europe’s largest economy, is largely dependent on Russian gas to fuel its export-led economy and to keep homes warm. But the nation has been bracing for a possible complete halt in Russian supplies if Moscow steps up its use of gas as an economic weapon against the West while it wages war in Ukraine.

    Already down from last year, Russian gas flows slowed even further through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline last month, and Berlin moved to the second of three stages of its supply emergency plan.

    Industry executives and economists are scrambling to figure out how Germany will fare in the coming months and beyond, and where it is especially vulnerable.

    Germany is known for its cars, and its machine tools fill factories throughout China, but sectors likely to be hardest hit are also its glass and chemicals industries.

    Here are six charts that illustrate Germany’s exposure:

    1. The Nord Stream 1 pipeline from Russia through the Baltic Sea is the most important direct gas route into Germany. Before the start of maintenance, flows were already down to 40% of capacity, with Russia citing trouble with turbines and sanctions.

    There is concern that after the maintenance period the pipeline closes for good.

    In that event, storage caverns would not be filled in time for the winter heating season, which is just three months away.

    2. It’s not just Germany. Gas flows to Europe are also curtailed via routes linking Russia with Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Austria via Ukraine and on another route through Belarus and Poland.

    3. Less gas and caps on prices for consumers have put the squeeze on energy suppliers like the German utility Uniper, which is in talks with the government about a possible bailout.

    Uniper’s plight is so far the most vivid example of the war’s effect on corporate Germany.

    4. German industry, which includes titans like Volkswagen and Siemens, is the biggest consumer of gas, but half of all households, which heat with gas, aren’t far behind.

    Emergency plans say homes should be prioritised if the state is forced into rationing, alongside hospitals and essential services, but there are also calls to make households part of savings programmes.

    5. Within the industries consuming gas for their processes, Germany’s chemical sector is the biggest single consumer. According to Moody’s, BASF alone uses 4% of Germany’s gas at its Ludwigshafen site.

    “In a scenario of reduced gas availability, European chemicals producers could face at least two winters with tight gas supplies,” Moody’s said in a research note, adding costs would go up as well.

    6. In the grimmest scenario, a complete halt to Russian natural gas exports could cost Germany 12.7% of economic performance in the second half of 2022, according to the Bavarian vbw industry association. That would translate into 193 billion euros ($195.57 billion) in total economic losses.

    Germany may be famous for its cars, but the industries that stand to see their activities most curtailed by lack of gas include glass, iron and steel, ceramics, food and printing, with vast knock-on effects to other sectors.

    ($1 = 0.9869 euros)

    (Reporting by Vera Eckert and Tom Sims Additional reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Mark Potter and Louise Heavens)

    Frequently Asked Questions about Germany’s gas crisis in charts: Pipeline repair, and then what?

    1What is the Nord Stream 1 pipeline?

    The Nord Stream 1 pipeline is a major natural gas pipeline that transports gas from Russia to Germany through the Baltic Sea, crucial for Germany's energy supply.

    2What is the chemical sector?

    The chemical sector encompasses industries involved in the production and processing of chemicals, which are vital for manufacturing various products, including plastics and pharmaceuticals.

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