US LNG Dominates Greek Gas Imports as Exports Triple

Gas demand rose 15% in the first half of 2026 as Greece pushed to become a supply gateway for the Balkans and southeastern Europe, new figures from grid operator DESFA show

The United States remained the largest supplier of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Greece in the first half of 2026, delivering 12.67 terawatt-hours and covering about 70% of the LNG that arrived through the country’s main import terminal, according to DESFA, Greece’s National Gas System Operator.

Set against total gas imports of 43.07 terawatt-hours, American cargoes accounted for nearly a third of everything Greece brought in over the period.

The figures come as Greece has worked to establish itself as an energy hub for southeastern Europe and a gateway for supplying the Balkans and eastern Europe with gas. Total demand rose 15.06% to 43.09 terawatt-hours, from 37.45 a year earlier, DESFA said.

The clearest sign of that ambition was exports, which tripled year over year to 8.72 terawatt-hours from 2.86. DESFA said the jump confirms Greece’s growing role as a transit point for gas moving north. The country’s position gained further weight after auctions held July 6 for capacity on the Vertical Corridor, a route designed to carry gas from Greece toward the Balkans, eastern Europe and central Europe.

Where the gas comes in

Total imports reached 43.07 terawatt-hours, up 14.76% from the first half of 2025. The Revithoussa terminal, on an islet at Agia Triada off the coast near Athens, was the main point of entry, handling 43% of all imports. Volumes through the terminal climbed 27.12% year over year to 18.61 terawatt-hours.

The Sidirokastro entry point in northern Greece followed with 15.47 terawatt-hours, and Nea Mesimvria with 5.53. The floating storage and regasification unit at Alexandroupolis, known as Amfitriti, brought in 3.46 terawatt-hours, more than triple the volume a year earlier.

Who supplies the LNG

Within LNG, the U.S. led with 12.67 terawatt-hours, followed by Nigeria at 4.16. Smaller volumes came from Egypt at 0.51, Algeria at 0.49 and Mauritania at 0.35. Greece took in 24 LNG cargoes carrying 18.18 terawatt-hours, compared with 27 cargoes and 14.66 terawatt-hours a year earlier, meaning fewer shipments delivered more gas.

Domestic demand holds steady

Consumption inside Greece was essentially flat at 34.37 terawatt-hours, a 0.64% dip from 34.59 a year earlier. Power generation, still the largest use at 65% of the total, eased to 22.41 terawatt-hours from 23.25. Distribution networks rose to 8.08 terawatt-hours, or 24% of consumption, while industry and compressed natural gas climbed to 3.88 terawatt-hours, or 11%.

Small-scale LNG doubles

Small-scale supply expanded sharply. DESFA’s truck loading service filled 537 trucks in the first half, up from 273 a year earlier. The volume moved reached 24,641 cubic meters, roughly double the 12,284 cubic meters recorded in the same period of 2025, which DESFA said points to a fast-growing market for small-scale LNG.

Source: ot.gr

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