In 2023, Norway led the European natural gas liquids sector with a gross available energy of 323.3 thousand terajoules, although it decreased by 5.9% compared to 2022. The Netherlands followed with a value of 200.67, down 5.58%, and the UK at 117.1, dropping 2.48%. Ukraine and Romania showed slight growth at 0.79% and 1.77%, respectively. Meanwhile, Belgium and Austria faced significant declines of over 40%. Over the last five years, countries showed varied trends, with Norway and the Netherlands experiencing moderate declines, while smaller economies like Serbia and Montenegro saw notable rises.
Future trends worth monitoring include potential growth in energy diversification, technological advancements in extraction and processing, and geopolitical impacts on energy policies across Europe.
Top countries in Natural Gas Liquids Gross Available Energy by Country
| # | 10 Countries | Terajoules | Last Year | YoY | 5-years CAGR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 Norway | 323,300 | 2023 | -2.12% | -5.9% | View data |
| 2 | 2 Netherlands | 200,670 | 2023 | -6.07% | -5.58% | View data |
| 3 | 3 United Kingdom | 117,100 | 2023 | -2.59% | -2.48% | View data |
| 4 | 4 Ukraine | 30,870 | 2023 | -0.67% | +0.79% | View data |
| 5 | 5 Finland | 30,290 | 2023 | +7.01% | -10.36% | View data |
| 6 | 6 France | 6,370 | 2023 | +12.1% | -14.64% | View data |
| 7 | 7 Hungary | 5,970 | 2023 | -11.07% | -9.84% | View data |
| 8 | 8 Romania | 4,030 | 2023 | -2.97% | +1.77% | View data |
| 9 | 9 Serbia | 2,900 | 2023 | +4.51% | +11.66% | View data |
| 10 | 10 Croatia | 2,100 | 2023 | -4.36% | -4.15% | View data |