Natural Gas Imports were 1% lower in February 2024 compared with February 2023. Indigenous Production was 12% lower in February 2024 compared with February 2023 (See Tables 1B, 1C, and Figure 1).
Gas Imports represented 80% of total metered supply in February 2024 with Indigenous Production from the Corrib gas field and biomethane plants accounting for the remaining 20% (See Tables 1A, 1B, and 1C).
Total metered gas demand in February 2024 was 4,419 gigawatt hours (GWh), which was 3% lower than the February 2023 figure of 4,578 GWh (See Table 2A).
Comparing February 2024 with February 2023, natural gas demand by customer category showed the following trends: Power Plants (-9%); Non-Daily Metered (+5%); Daily Metered (+4%); and Large Daily Metered (+3%) (See Tables 2B to 2E).
Networked gas demand for February 2024 was lowest on 04 February 2024 with daily demand of 96 GWh and was highest on 13 February 2024 with daily demand of 202 GWh (See Table 4A).
Gas Imports represented 80% of total metered supply in February 2024 with Indigenous Production from the Corrib gas field and biomethane plants accounting for the remaining 20% (See Tables 1A, 1B, 1C, and Figure 1).
X-axis label | Imports | Monthly Indigenous Production |
---|---|---|
January 2018 | 1381 | 3503 |
February 2018 | 1619 | 3084 |
March 2018 | 1971 | 3300 |
April 2018 | 1674 | 2910 |
May 2018 | 1646 | 2969 |
June 2018 | 1606 | 3038 |
July 2018 | 1680 | 2997 |
August 2018 | 1424 | 2911 |
September 2018 | 1673 | 2344 |
October 2018 | 2128 | 2884 |
November 2018 | 2443 | 2668 |
December 2018 | 2277 | 2695 |
January 2019 | 2719 | 2712 |
February 2019 | 2007 | 2360 |
March 2019 | 2583 | 2597 |
April 2019 | 2684 | 2427 |
May 2019 | 2678 | 2472 |
June 2019 | 2262 | 2330 |
July 2019 | 2328 | 2342 |
August 2019 | 1637 | 2329 |
September 2019 | 2337 | 1714 |
October 2019 | 2909 | 1950 |
November 2019 | 3291 | 2186 |
December 2019 | 2933 | 2214 |
January 2020 | 3247 | 2132 |
February 2020 | 3028 | 1919 |
March 2020 | 3168 | 2045 |
April 2020 | 2631 | 1936 |
May 2020 | 2822 | 1822 |
June 2020 | 2602 | 1815 |
July 2020 | 2809 | 1776 |
August 2020 | 2913 | 1727 |
September 2020 | 3255 | 1268 |
October 2020 | 3012 | 1549 |
November 2020 | 3340 | 1562 |
December 2020 | 3852 | 1621 |
January 2021 | 4361 | 1494 |
February 2021 | 3191 | 1453 |
March 2021 | 3706 | 1581 |
April 2021 | 3355 | 1503 |
May 2021 | 2826 | 1335 |
June 2021 | 2737 | 1253 |
July 2021 | 3882 | 306 |
August 2021 | 2785 | 1431 |
September 2021 | 2532 | 1434 |
October 2021 | 2702 | 1407 |
November 2021 | 3498 | 1394 |
December 2021 | 3534 | 1412 |
January 2022 | 4132 | 1406 |
February 2022 | 3062 | 1202 |
March 2022 | 3607 | 1350 |
April 2022 | 3583 | 1288 |
May 2022 | 3286 | 1265 |
June 2022 | 3190 | 1225 |
July 2022 | 3520 | 1102 |
August 2022 | 3484 | 1234 |
September 2022 | 3032 | 1186 |
October 2022 | 2809 | 1220 |
November 2022 | 3391 | 1168 |
December 2022 | 4412 | 1178 |
January 2023 | 4010 | 1144 |
February 2023 | 3554 | 1024 |
March 2023 | 4067 | 1124 |
April 2023 | 3410 | 1054 |
May 2023 | 3362 | 1109 |
June 2023 | 2985 | 1050 |
July 2023 | 3251 | 543 |
August 2023 | 2994 | 737 |
September 2023 | 2659 | 1030 |
October 2023 | 3119 | 1053 |
November 2023 | 3658 | 1001 |
December 2023 | 3286 | 1023 |
January 2024 | 4587 | 969 |
February 2024 | 3517 | 901 |
In February 2024, Power Plants accounted for 56% of total gas demand, down from 59% of total demand in February 2023. Non-Daily Metered represented 29% of total gas demand, up from 26% of total demand in February 2023 (See Tables 2A, 2B, 2C, and Figure 2).
X-axis label | Non-Daily Metered | Power Plants |
---|---|---|
January 2018 | 1853 | 2322 |
February 2018 | 1780 | 2191 |
March 2018 | 1841 | 2616 |
April 2018 | 1147 | 2636 |
May 2018 | 623 | 3173 |
June 2018 | 309 | 3617 |
July 2018 | 261 | 3752 |
August 2018 | 333 | 3303 |
September 2018 | 552 | 2767 |
October 2018 | 1006 | 3116 |
November 2018 | 1387 | 2876 |
December 2018 | 1508 | 2751 |
January 2019 | 1725 | 2965 |
February 2019 | 1403 | 2239 |
March 2019 | 1442 | 2858 |
April 2019 | 1139 | 3089 |
May 2019 | 731 | 3563 |
June 2019 | 576 | 3228 |
July 2019 | 314 | 3584 |
August 2019 | 345 | 2838 |
September 2019 | 478 | 2802 |
October 2019 | 1061 | 2974 |
November 2019 | 1545 | 3110 |
December 2019 | 1728 | 2714 |
January 2020 | 1751 | 2892 |
February 2020 | 1719 | 2441 |
March 2020 | 1535 | 2778 |
April 2020 | 809 | 2955 |
May 2020 | 533 | 3296 |
June 2020 | 400 | 3251 |
July 2020 | 381 | 3442 |
August 2020 | 357 | 3524 |
September 2020 | 511 | 3247 |
October 2020 | 1053 | 2698 |
November 2020 | 1283 | 2824 |
December 2020 | 1790 | 2950 |
January 2021 | 1929 | 3151 |
February 2021 | 1566 | 2287 |
March 2021 | 1389 | 2994 |
April 2021 | 1091 | 2848 |
May 2021 | 843 | 2403 |
June 2021 | 372 | 2800 |
July 2021 | 300 | 3133 |
August 2021 | 352 | 3099 |
September 2021 | 375 | 2837 |
October 2021 | 801 | 2548 |
November 2021 | 1352 | 2779 |
December 2021 | 1600 | 2665 |
January 2022 | 1703 | 3122 |
February 2022 | 1486 | 2039 |
March 2022 | 1330 | 2764 |
April 2022 | 983 | 3030 |
May 2022 | 555 | 3142 |
June 2022 | 393 | 3223 |
July 2022 | 289 | 3600 |
August 2022 | 277 | 3722 |
September 2022 | 407 | 3109 |
October 2022 | 685 | 2602 |
November 2022 | 1081 | 2726 |
December 2022 | 1674 | 3224 |
January 2023 | 1580 | 2888 |
February 2023 | 1199 | 2698 |
March 2023 | 1307 | 3035 |
April 2023 | 871 | 2784 |
May 2023 | 457 | 3230 |
June 2023 | 275 | 3066 |
July 2023 | 307 | 2799 |
August 2023 | 309 | 2715 |
September 2023 | 374 | 2625 |
October 2023 | 716 | 2739 |
November 2023 | 1197 | 2738 |
December 2023 | 1384 | 2287 |
January 2024 | 1678 | 3137 |
February 2024 | 1260 | 2453 |
Networked gas demand for February 2024 was lowest on 04 February 2024 with daily demand of 96 GWh and was highest on 13 February 2024 with daily demand of 202 GWh (See Table 4A). On 04 February 2024 Dublin Airport recorded a maximum daily air temperature of of 13.4 degrees Celsius and a daily mean wind speed of 13.5 knots. On 13 February 2024 Dublin Airport recorded a daily mean wind speed of 5.5 Knots (See Table 5 and Table 6).
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Statistician's Comment
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has today (23 April 2024) published Networked Gas Daily Supply and Demand February 2024.
Commenting on the release, Deirdre Moran, Statistician in the Climate and Energy Division, said: “Total metered gas demand in February 2024 was 4,419 gigawatt hours (GWh), which was 3% lower than the February 2023 figure of 4,578 GWh (See Table 2A).
Comparing February 2024 with February 2023, natural gas demand by customer category showed the following trends: Power Plants (-9%); Non-Daily Metered (+5%); Daily Metered (+4%); and Large Daily Metered (+3%) (See Tables 2B to 2E).
In February 2024, Power Plants accounted for 56% of total gas demand, down from 59% of total demand in February 2023. Non-Daily Metered represented 29% of total gas demand, up from 26% of total demand in February 2023. (See Tables 2A, 2B, 2C, and Figure 2).
Networked gas demand for February 2024 was lowest on 04 February 2024 with daily demand of 96 GWh and was highest on 13 February 2024 with daily demand of 202 GWh (See Table 4A).
The 04 February 2024 had a maximum daily air temperature of 13.4 degrees Celsius recorded at Dublin Airport. This was the second highest maximum daily air temperature recorded at Dublin Airport in February 2024 (See Table 5).
The 04 February 2024 had a daily mean wind speed of 13.5 Knots recorded at Dublin Airport. This was the second highest daily mean wind speed recorded at Dublin Airport in February 2024. The 13 February 2024 had a daily mean wind speed of 5.5 Knots recorded at Dublin Airport, the second lowest daily mean wind speed recorded at Dublin Airport in February 2024 (See Table 6).
Total networked gas supply in February 2024 was 4,419 gigawatt hours (GWh). The February supply figure was 20% lower than the January 2024 figure of 5,555 GWh (See Table 1A).
Gas Imports represented 80% of total metered supply in February 2024 with Indigenous Production from the Corrib gas field and biomethane plants accounting for the remaining 20% (See Tables 1A, 1B, 1C, and Figure 1)."
Meteorological Data
This release includes information on the maximum daily air temperatures at Dublin Airport (See Table 5) and daily mean wind speed at Dublin Airport (See Table 6). Low maximum daily air temperatures in winter usually increases the demand for household heating. The amount of wind can influence the balance between electricity generated from natural gas and wind turbines.