The German federal government is planning to establish a state-owned natural gas reserve to ensure energy supply during crises. The plan, confirmed by the Ministry of Economics under Katharina Reiche (CDU), aims to cover a potential 30-day disruption of major import infrastructure. Costs are estimated at 1.2 to 1.5 billion euros, to be funded through a new consumer surcharge rather than direct government spending. The reserve would hold around 24 terawatt-hours, equivalent to ten percent of Germany’s storage capacity, with initial filling planned for summer 2027. It would be managed by the Federal Network Agency and could mitigate disruptions such as the loss of Norway’s gas imports or extreme winter shortages. The Greens’ energy spokesperson, Michael Kellner, supports the concept but criticizes the timing, arguing it may not address immediate winter concerns.
Bias read (Center): The article presents the government's plan neutrally, citing official sources like the Ministry of Economics and Reuters. While the issue of energy security is politically sensitive, the framing does not show clear ideological leaning. The focus is on factual reporting of the proposed policy, with a





