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The current value of the Natural Gas Imports in Slovakia is 60,642.356 Terajoule. The Natural Gas Imports in Slovakia increased to 60,642.356 Terajoule on 6/1/2024, after it was 58,436.461 Terajoule on 5/1/2024. From 1/1/2008 to 6/1/2024, the average GDP in Slovakia was 106,540.91 Terajoule. The all-time high was reached on 5/1/2019 with 247,454 Terajoule, while the lowest value was recorded on 7/1/2008 with 9,154 Terajoule.
Natural Gas Imports ·
3 years
5 years
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25 Years
Max
Natural gas imports | |
---|---|
1/1/2008 | 25,901 Terajoule |
2/1/2008 | 23,371 Terajoule |
3/1/2008 | 24,339 Terajoule |
4/1/2008 | 18,055 Terajoule |
5/1/2008 | 24,594 Terajoule |
6/1/2008 | 13,802 Terajoule |
7/1/2008 | 9,154 Terajoule |
8/1/2008 | 9,936 Terajoule |
9/1/2008 | 11,597 Terajoule |
10/1/2008 | 16,294 Terajoule |
11/1/2008 | 16,464 Terajoule |
12/1/2008 | 20,274 Terajoule |
1/1/2009 | 18,373 Terajoule |
2/1/2009 | 17,331 Terajoule |
3/1/2009 | 15,761 Terajoule |
4/1/2009 | 10,483 Terajoule |
5/1/2009 | 25,309 Terajoule |
6/1/2009 | 23,212 Terajoule |
7/1/2009 | 18,856 Terajoule |
8/1/2009 | 24,349 Terajoule |
9/1/2009 | 24,462 Terajoule |
10/1/2009 | 29,834 Terajoule |
11/1/2009 | 26,864 Terajoule |
12/1/2009 | 31,563 Terajoule |
1/1/2010 | 30,440 Terajoule |
2/1/2010 | 19,953 Terajoule |
3/1/2010 | 14,051 Terajoule |
4/1/2010 | 13,467 Terajoule |
5/1/2010 | 30,433 Terajoule |
6/1/2010 | 28,389 Terajoule |
7/1/2010 | 27,613 Terajoule |
8/1/2010 | 27,492 Terajoule |
9/1/2010 | 34,475 Terajoule |
10/1/2010 | 29,142 Terajoule |
11/1/2010 | 27,873 Terajoule |
12/1/2010 | 33,772 Terajoule |
1/1/2011 | 34,069 Terajoule |
2/1/2011 | 30,343 Terajoule |
3/1/2011 | 21,550 Terajoule |
4/1/2011 | 18,325 Terajoule |
5/1/2011 | 26,450 Terajoule |
6/1/2011 | 23,832 Terajoule |
7/1/2011 | 24,548 Terajoule |
8/1/2011 | 17,972 Terajoule |
9/1/2011 | 13,387 Terajoule |
10/1/2011 | 18,846 Terajoule |
11/1/2011 | 23,466 Terajoule |
12/1/2011 | 23,574 Terajoule |
1/1/2012 | 24,259 Terajoule |
2/1/2012 | 22,370 Terajoule |
3/1/2012 | 17,375 Terajoule |
4/1/2012 | 16,734 Terajoule |
5/1/2012 | 14,575 Terajoule |
6/1/2012 | 16,715 Terajoule |
7/1/2012 | 19,135 Terajoule |
8/1/2012 | 23,885 Terajoule |
9/1/2012 | 18,529 Terajoule |
10/1/2012 | 19,409 Terajoule |
11/1/2012 | 17,141 Terajoule |
12/1/2012 | 22,060 Terajoule |
1/1/2013 | 139,394 Terajoule |
2/1/2013 | 126,316 Terajoule |
3/1/2013 | 147,425 Terajoule |
4/1/2013 | 141,185 Terajoule |
5/1/2013 | 148,200 Terajoule |
6/1/2013 | 184,103 Terajoule |
7/1/2013 | 197,983 Terajoule |
8/1/2013 | 191,297 Terajoule |
9/1/2013 | 205,332 Terajoule |
10/1/2013 | 185,957 Terajoule |
11/1/2013 | 168,849 Terajoule |
12/1/2013 | 207,327 Terajoule |
1/1/2014 | 165,702 Terajoule |
2/1/2014 | 120,763 Terajoule |
3/1/2014 | 150,566 Terajoule |
4/1/2014 | 148,733 Terajoule |
5/1/2014 | 153,617 Terajoule |
6/1/2014 | 153,627 Terajoule |
7/1/2014 | 133,998 Terajoule |
8/1/2014 | 114,097 Terajoule |
9/1/2014 | 100,803 Terajoule |
10/1/2014 | 106,164 Terajoule |
11/1/2014 | 108,472 Terajoule |
12/1/2014 | 98,642 Terajoule |
1/1/2015 | 116,204 Terajoule |
2/1/2015 | 102,172 Terajoule |
3/1/2015 | 147,821 Terajoule |
4/1/2015 | 167,750 Terajoule |
5/1/2015 | 174,430 Terajoule |
6/1/2015 | 174,422 Terajoule |
7/1/2015 | 178,785 Terajoule |
8/1/2015 | 185,102 Terajoule |
9/1/2015 | 183,608 Terajoule |
10/1/2015 | 163,531 Terajoule |
11/1/2015 | 133,453 Terajoule |
12/1/2015 | 144,055 Terajoule |
1/1/2016 | 123,893 Terajoule |
2/1/2016 | 147,766 Terajoule |
3/1/2016 | 168,837 Terajoule |
4/1/2016 | 132,174 Terajoule |
5/1/2016 | 165,754 Terajoule |
6/1/2016 | 166,702 Terajoule |
7/1/2016 | 162,847 Terajoule |
8/1/2016 | 193,318 Terajoule |
9/1/2016 | 193,529 Terajoule |
10/1/2016 | 208,574 Terajoule |
11/1/2016 | 196,557 Terajoule |
12/1/2016 | 176,916 Terajoule |
1/1/2017 | 198,682 Terajoule |
2/1/2017 | 165,028 Terajoule |
3/1/2017 | 150,211 Terajoule |
4/1/2017 | 185,366 Terajoule |
5/1/2017 | 211,175 Terajoule |
6/1/2017 | 191,605 Terajoule |
7/1/2017 | 193,373 Terajoule |
8/1/2017 | 244,695 Terajoule |
9/1/2017 | 212,918 Terajoule |
10/1/2017 | 165,018 Terajoule |
11/1/2017 | 187,867 Terajoule |
12/1/2017 | 162,271 Terajoule |
1/1/2018 | 109,363 Terajoule |
2/1/2018 | 125,924 Terajoule |
3/1/2018 | 171,496 Terajoule |
4/1/2018 | 200,475 Terajoule |
5/1/2018 | 201,551 Terajoule |
6/1/2018 | 180,424 Terajoule |
7/1/2018 | 216,719 Terajoule |
8/1/2018 | 193,269 Terajoule |
9/1/2018 | 182,574 Terajoule |
10/1/2018 | 167,784 Terajoule |
11/1/2018 | 170,756 Terajoule |
12/1/2018 | 171,090 Terajoule |
1/1/2019 | 180,291 Terajoule |
2/1/2019 | 154,297 Terajoule |
3/1/2019 | 201,552 Terajoule |
4/1/2019 | 218,052 Terajoule |
5/1/2019 | 247,454 Terajoule |
6/1/2019 | 217,931 Terajoule |
7/1/2019 | 239,688 Terajoule |
8/1/2019 | 188,823 Terajoule |
9/1/2019 | 182,405 Terajoule |
10/1/2019 | 194,307 Terajoule |
11/1/2019 | 212,235 Terajoule |
12/1/2019 | 202,338 Terajoule |
1/1/2020 | 108,122.46 Terajoule |
2/1/2020 | 141,809.67 Terajoule |
3/1/2020 | 195,385.3 Terajoule |
4/1/2020 | 172,900.87 Terajoule |
5/1/2020 | 177,551.93 Terajoule |
6/1/2020 | 192,809.66 Terajoule |
7/1/2020 | 186,706.01 Terajoule |
8/1/2020 | 192,822.32 Terajoule |
9/1/2020 | 145,938.91 Terajoule |
10/1/2020 | 164,863.96 Terajoule |
11/1/2020 | 144,589.09 Terajoule |
12/1/2020 | 155,571.3 Terajoule |
1/1/2021 | 129,655.6 Terajoule |
2/1/2021 | 72,160.33 Terajoule |
3/1/2021 | 126,640.03 Terajoule |
4/1/2021 | 141,822.28 Terajoule |
5/1/2021 | 151,099.18 Terajoule |
6/1/2021 | 145,789.42 Terajoule |
7/1/2021 | 137,120.97 Terajoule |
8/1/2021 | 146,928.37 Terajoule |
9/1/2021 | 136,811.86 Terajoule |
10/1/2021 | 137,037.06 Terajoule |
11/1/2021 | 125,111.47 Terajoule |
12/1/2021 | 127,207.5 Terajoule |
1/1/2022 | 80,139.36 Terajoule |
2/1/2022 | 87,155.59 Terajoule |
3/1/2022 | 148,444.5 Terajoule |
4/1/2022 | 94,250.43 Terajoule |
5/1/2022 | 116,188.16 Terajoule |
6/1/2022 | 90,751.57 Terajoule |
7/1/2022 | 76,569.89 Terajoule |
8/1/2022 | 70,827.79 Terajoule |
9/1/2022 | 55,492.74 Terajoule |
10/1/2022 | 64,757.29 Terajoule |
11/1/2022 | 57,835.5 Terajoule |
12/1/2022 | 54,598.37 Terajoule |
1/1/2023 | 44,223.5 Terajoule |
2/1/2023 | 41,092.96 Terajoule |
3/1/2023 | 46,283.84 Terajoule |
4/1/2023 | 44,261.71 Terajoule |
5/1/2023 | 53,791.36 Terajoule |
6/1/2023 | 53,654.26 Terajoule |
7/1/2023 | 51,637.72 Terajoule |
8/1/2023 | 56,312.64 Terajoule |
9/1/2023 | 44,709.31 Terajoule |
10/1/2023 | 47,518.89 Terajoule |
11/1/2023 | 48,051.56 Terajoule |
12/1/2023 | 57,435.32 Terajoule |
1/1/2024 | 58,053.35 Terajoule |
2/1/2024 | 52,978.25 Terajoule |
3/1/2024 | 55,598.79 Terajoule |
4/1/2024 | 55,365.52 Terajoule |
5/1/2024 | 58,436.46 Terajoule |
6/1/2024 | 60,642.36 Terajoule |
Natural Gas Imports History
Date | Value |
---|---|
6/1/2024 | 60,642.356 Terajoule |
5/1/2024 | 58,436.461 Terajoule |
4/1/2024 | 55,365.523 Terajoule |
3/1/2024 | 55,598.793 Terajoule |
2/1/2024 | 52,978.247 Terajoule |
1/1/2024 | 58,053.347 Terajoule |
12/1/2023 | 57,435.318 Terajoule |
11/1/2023 | 48,051.556 Terajoule |
10/1/2023 | 47,518.89 Terajoule |
9/1/2023 | 44,709.308 Terajoule |
Similar Macro Indicators to Natural Gas Imports
Name | Current | Previous | Frequency |
---|---|---|---|
🇸🇰 Arms Sales | 154 M SIPRI TIV | 71 M SIPRI TIV | Annually |
🇸🇰 Capital Flows | 618.69 M EUR | 172.46 M EUR | Monthly |
🇸🇰 Current Account | -161.5 M EUR | -97.9 M EUR | Monthly |
🇸🇰 Current Account to GDP | -1.6 % of GDP | -7.3 % of GDP | Annually |
🇸🇰 Exports | 8.968 B EUR | 8.798 B EUR | Monthly |
🇸🇰 Foreign debt | 125.22 B EUR | 118.059 B EUR | Quarter |
🇸🇰 Foreign Debt to GDP | 100 % of GDP | 100 % of GDP | Quarter |
🇸🇰 Foreign Direct Investments | -119.8 M EUR | 246.2 M EUR | Monthly |
🇸🇰 Gold reserves | 31.69 Tonnes | 31.69 Tonnes | Quarter |
🇸🇰 Imports | 8.503 B EUR | 8.305 B EUR | Monthly |
🇸🇰 Terrorism Index | 1.092 Points | 2.784 Points | Annually |
🇸🇰 Trade Balance | 465.8 M EUR | 492.8 M EUR | Monthly |
🇸🇰 Trading Conditions | 99.8 points | 100.4 points | Monthly |
Macro pages for other countries in Europe
- 🇦🇱Albania
- 🇦🇹Austria
- 🇧🇾Belarus
- 🇧🇪Belgium
- 🇧🇦Bosnia and Herzegovina
- 🇧🇬Bulgaria
- 🇭🇷Croatia
- 🇨🇾Cyprus
- 🇨🇿Czech Republic
- 🇩🇰Denmark
- 🇪🇪Estonia
- 🇫🇴Faroe Islands
- 🇫🇮Finland
- 🇫🇷France
- 🇩🇪Germany
- 🇬🇷Greece
- 🇭🇺Hungary
- 🇮🇸Island
- 🇮🇪Ireland
- 🇮🇹Italy
- 🇽🇰Kosovo
- 🇱🇻Latvia
- 🇱🇮Liechtenstein
- 🇱🇹Lithuania
- 🇱🇺Luxembourg
- 🇲🇰North Macedonia
- 🇲🇹Malta
- 🇲🇩Moldova
- 🇲🇨Monaco
- 🇲🇪Montenegro
- 🇳🇱Netherlands
- 🇳🇴Norway
- 🇵🇱Poland
- 🇵🇹Portugal
- 🇷🇴Romania
- 🇷🇺Russia
- 🇷🇸Serbia
- 🇸🇮Slovenia
- 🇪🇸Spain
- 🇸🇪Sweden
- 🇨🇭Switzerland
- 🇺🇦Ukraine
- 🇬🇧United Kingdom
- 🇦🇩Andorra
What is Natural Gas Imports?
Natural Gas Imports: An In-Depth Analysis Natural gas is a pivotal component in the global energy landscape, serving as a crucial resource for electricity generation, heating, industrial processes, and as a cleaner alternative to other fossil fuels. As such, natural gas imports carry significant macroeconomic implications, influencing national energy security, economic stability, trade balances, and environmental policies. This makes understanding the dynamics of natural gas imports critical for policymakers, energy analysts, economists, and businesses alike. At Eulerpool, we delve deep into the macroeconomic data surrounding natural gas imports. By providing comprehensive and accurate data, our objective is to aid stakeholders in making informed decisions. To this end, this analysis will explore the multifaceted aspects of natural gas imports, including the reasons behind importing natural gas, its economic impacts, trends, and strategic considerations. ### Understanding Natural Gas Imports Natural gas imports are predominantly driven by the disparity between domestic consumption and production levels. Countries with limited natural gas reserves or production capabilities rely on imports to meet their energy needs. For instance, nations with high industrial activity or those undergoing rapid economic development may experience increasing demand for natural gas, outstripping their domestic production capacities. Consequently, these nations turn to global markets to bridge the gap, ensuring a stable and sufficient energy supply. ### Economic Impacts of Natural Gas Imports 1. **Energy Security**: One of the foremost considerations is energy security. By diversifying their sources of natural gas through imports, countries can mitigate risks associated with domestic production shortfalls or geopolitical tensions that might disrupt supply. This diversification can lead to more stable and predictable energy markets, enhancing overall economic stability. 2. **Trade Balance**: The import of natural gas directly affects a country's trade balance. Countries that are net importers must account for significant expenditures in their current accounts. While this may seem like a negative factor, it is essential to consider the broader economic context. Investments in infrastructure such as liquified natural gas (LNG) terminals, pipelines, and storage facilities generate economic activity and employment. Additionally, the availability of natural gas at competitive prices supports industries that rely on it, sustaining economic growth. 3. **Price Stability**: Importing natural gas can influence domestic pricing structures. Access to various international suppliers can exert downward pressure on prices, benefiting consumers and industries. However, this is contingent on global market conditions, geopolitical developments, and supply chain logistics. Price volatility on the international stage can propagate to importing nations, necessitating effective strategic planning and risk management. 4. **Technological Investment and Infrastructure**: The need for importing natural gas promotes investment in the requisite infrastructure, such as LNG terminals, regasification plants, and pipelines. These technological advancements facilitate smoother and more efficient import processes. Consequently, countries can leverage state-of-the-art technology, bolstering their overall economic and technological landscape. ### Trends in Natural Gas Imports Several trends have emerged in recent years, reshaping the landscape of natural gas imports: 1. **LNG Market Growth**: The liquefied natural gas market has expanded significantly. LNG offers flexibility in transportation, as it can be shipped worldwide, bypassing the need for extensive pipeline networks. This has enabled countries without direct pipeline connections to major producers to access natural gas, fostering a more interconnected global market. 2. **Diversification of Suppliers**: Countries are actively seeking to diversify their natural gas import sources to mitigate dependency on any single nation or region. This is particularly evident in Europe, where diversification efforts aim to reduce reliance on Russian gas. Importers are engaging with suppliers from North America, the Middle East, and Africa, among other regions. 3. **Environmental Considerations**: Increasing awareness of environmental issues has influenced natural gas import strategies. Natural gas is often seen as a transitional fuel towards a lower-carbon future due to its relatively cleaner combustion compared to coal and oil. Countries are incorporating natural gas into their energy mix to reduce carbon emissions while investing in renewable energy sources. This trend is supported by international agreements and national policies aimed at combating climate change. 4. **Geopolitical Developments**: Geopolitical dynamics play a crucial role in natural gas imports. Political relations, trade policies, and regional conflicts can all impact the availability and pricing of natural gas. Recent developments, such as the U.S.-China trade war and Russia’s geopolitical strategies, have had significant repercussions on global natural gas flows, prompting countries to re-evaluate their import strategies in light of these complexities. ### Strategic Considerations For countries and companies involved in natural gas imports, several strategic considerations must be taken into account: 1. **Long-term Contracts vs. Spot Market**: Deciding between long-term contracts and spot market purchases is a critical strategy. Long-term contracts provide price stability and supply security, which is beneficial for planning and budgeting purposes. However, they may come with higher prices and inflexibility. The spot market offers potentially lower prices and flexibility but carries risks of price volatility. Balancing these options requires careful analysis of market conditions and future projections. 2. **Storage and Resilience**: Building adequate storage facilities is crucial for managing supply fluctuations and ensuring resilience against disruptions. Strategic reserves can act as buffers, providing a steady supply during peak demand periods or unexpected supply interruptions. Effective storage strategies also contribute to price stabilization. 3. **Investing in Renewable Integration**: As the world progresses towards cleaner energy, integrating natural gas infrastructure with renewable energy systems becomes vital. This involves developing hybrid systems where natural gas can complement intermittent renewable sources such as wind and solar, ensuring a reliable and continuous energy supply. 4. **Regulatory Frameworks and Policies**: Compliance with international regulations and national policies is fundamental. Countries must navigate complex regulatory environments while fostering transparency and cooperation. Robust legal frameworks protect investments and promote fair trade practices, benefiting all parties involved in natural gas imports. ### Conclusion Natural gas imports represent a critical component of the modern energy paradigm, influencing economic stability, energy security, and environmental sustainability. By understanding the intricate dynamics of natural gas imports, stakeholders can make informed decisions that align with their economic and strategic objectives. At Eulerpool, our commitment to providing detailed macroeconomic data empowers businesses, policymakers, and analysts to navigate the complexities of the natural gas market effectively. As the global energy landscape continues to evolve, natural gas imports will remain a focal point, underscoring the need for continued investment, innovative strategies, and international cooperation.