Russian Natural Gas Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Million Metric British Thermal Unit

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Jun 2025: 516.752 (113.22%)
Chart

Description: Natural Gas (Europe), average import border price and a spot price component, beginning April 2010 including UK; during June 2000 - March 2010 prices excludes UK.

Unit: Russian Ruble per Million Metric British Thermal Unit



Source: World Gas Intelligence; World Bank.

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Russian natural gas is a pipeline fuel traded in commodity markets as a regional border-delivered price, commonly expressed in U.S. dollars per million metric British thermal units. For European pricing references, the benchmark reflects gas delivered to border points in Germany and neighboring transit systems, where pipeline access, contract terms, and transport costs shape the quoted value. Natural gas is valued for its high energy content, relatively low emissions compared with coal and oil when combusted, and its flexibility in power generation, industrial heat, and building heat. It is also used as a feedstock in ammonia and methanol production, linking gas prices to fertilizer and chemical markets. Because gas is costly to store and transport over long distances without pipelines or liquefaction, regional infrastructure strongly influences pricing. Russian pipeline gas has historically been important in Europe because of the extensive legacy pipeline network connecting producing basins in Russia to consuming markets in Central and Western Europe.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by geology, pipeline infrastructure, and the long lead times required to develop gas fields and transport systems. Russian gas production is concentrated in large onshore basins in western Siberia and adjacent regions, where very large conventional reservoirs support long-lived output. These fields require extensive gathering systems, compression, and long-distance pipelines to reach European markets. Because pipeline gas depends on fixed transport corridors, bottlenecks at border points, compressor stations, and transit routes can affect deliverability and pricing even when upstream production is stable.

Seasonality matters because gas demand and field operations are linked to winter heating loads and storage withdrawal cycles. In cold periods, supply must respond quickly, but production and pipeline flows are less flexible than spot demand. Unlike oil, gas cannot be economically moved in bulk by tanker without liquefaction, so regional market access remains constrained by infrastructure. Maintenance schedules, reservoir decline in mature fields, and the pace of new field development also influence supply. In addition, gas quality, pressure requirements, and contractual nomination systems create operational constraints that are persistent features of pipeline markets.

Demand Drivers

Demand is driven by space heating, industrial fuel use, and power generation. In Europe, natural gas is a core winter heating fuel, so consumption rises with cold weather and falls with mild temperatures. This creates a strong seasonal pattern in border prices because storage injections and withdrawals must balance the heating cycle. Industrial users consume gas for process heat, steam, and as a chemical feedstock, especially in ammonia, methanol, and other gas-intensive industries. Power generators also use gas for flexible dispatch, particularly where gas-fired plants balance variable renewable output or meet peak demand.

Substitution is important. Gas competes with coal in power generation and with heating oil or district heating in buildings, while in some industrial uses it competes with electricity, coal, or biomass depending on equipment and policy. The relative price of gas versus coal and carbon-intensive fuels affects fuel switching in power markets. Demand is also shaped by the efficiency of buildings, the penetration of district heating, and the stock of gas-fired appliances and turbines, all of which change slowly over time. Because many end uses require continuous supply, demand can be relatively inelastic in the short run, especially during cold spells.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Russian natural gas prices in U.S. dollars are influenced by exchange rates because the benchmark is quoted in dollars while many buyers earn revenue in euros or local currencies. A stronger dollar can raise the local-currency cost of imported gas. Interest rates matter indirectly through storage economics: holding gas in inventory has financing and storage costs, so the forward curve often reflects the cost of carry. When storage is abundant, nearby and deferred prices can diverge according to seasonal balancing needs, producing contango or backwardation depending on supply tightness and weather expectations.

Broader industrial activity also matters because gas demand is tied to manufacturing, power generation, and heating. Gas prices often correlate with other energy markets through fuel substitution, especially coal and oil products, and with electricity prices in power systems that rely on gas-fired generation. Because pipeline gas is regionally constrained, financial pricing reflects both global energy conditions and local infrastructure conditions rather than a single worldwide benchmark.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2021456.40-
Apr 2021544.1719.23%
May 2021659.1621.13%
Jun 2021747.6713.43%
Jul 2021925.6023.80%
Aug 20211,135.3822.66%
Sep 20211,665.1146.66%
Oct 20212,216.3533.11%
Nov 20211,996.63-9.91%
Dec 20212,804.3940.46%
Jan 20222,167.26-22.72%
Feb 20222,126.27-1.89%
Mar 20224,360.88105.10%
Apr 20222,491.92-42.86%
May 20221,844.28-25.99%
Jun 20221,905.283.31%
Jul 20223,013.4558.16%
Aug 20224,229.3840.35%
Sep 20223,524.77-16.66%
Oct 20222,394.74-32.06%
Nov 20222,171.40-9.33%
Dec 20222,349.618.21%
Jan 20231,392.73-40.73%
Feb 20231,205.93-13.41%
Mar 20231,051.05-12.84%
Apr 20231,097.544.42%
May 2023801.34-26.99%
Jun 2023867.758.29%
Jul 2023866.68-0.12%
Aug 20231,068.5523.29%
Sep 20231,116.414.48%
Oct 20231,408.5926.17%
Nov 20231,311.82-6.87%
Dec 20231,045.99-20.26%
Jan 2024848.97-18.84%
Feb 2024746.00-12.13%
Mar 2024784.835.21%
Apr 2024844.997.67%
May 2024917.758.61%
Jun 2024954.804.04%
Jul 2024904.65-5.25%
Aug 20241,104.6322.11%
Sep 20241,078.37-2.38%
Oct 20241,244.2215.38%
Nov 20241,397.7512.34%
Dec 20241,426.432.05%
Jan 20251,466.152.78%
Feb 20251,416.01-3.42%
Mar 20251,137.21-19.69%
Apr 2025964.37-15.20%
May 2025935.89-2.95%
Jun 2025973.153.98%

Top Companies

Gazprom
Website: http://www.gazprom.com/
Location: Moscow, Russia
Estimated Production: 540 billion cubic meters (BCM) per year

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