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SYSTEM OPERATION

Capacity

Gas shippers are responsible for transporting gas from producers to end consumers – whether homes, businesses, industrial plants or power stations. Gas is transported around Great Britain by the National Transmission System (NTS), which is owned and operated by National Gas. If a shipper wishes to move gas through our pipelines, they must book capacity on the network. 

Book your ‘ticket to ride’ on the NTS 

Capacity is essentially ‘space’ in the pipeline. Shippers must rent pipeline space for the duration they wish to move gas through it. If we think of the NTS as the motorway network for gas, then renting capacity on it is the motorway toll – it’s your ticket to ride on the network. 

Our high-pressure NTS network is an extremely complex matrix comprising of thousands of miles of pipeline. It carries gas from its points of entry to large users such as power stations and industry, to storage facilities, and to the domestic Gas Distribution Networks (GDNs), as well as overseas via interconnectors. The capacity regime we operate simplifies this complexity for shippers. To rent space, shippers simply need to book either entry capacity to flow gas into the system or exit capacity to flow gas off the system. 

The way we rent out space (capacity) on our network is via auctions. Shippers may need to move gas on the NTS for different periods of time, from a day up to a decade or more – so we offer a range of auctions covering short to long-term capacity requirements.  

Find out more about the different types of long and short-term capacity auctions, when they open and close, how to bid, and the entitlements granted to successful bidders: 

Entry Capacity

Gas can enter the NTS from a variety of points, including onshore terminals, gas storage facilities, liquefied natural gas (LNG) ports or European interconnectors. Each point of entry requires capacity to be booked for the gas that is coming in

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Exit Capacity

Gas can exit the NTS to a variety of end users, including domestic gas distribution networks (GDNs), power stations, large industrial users, gas storage facilities or European interconnectors. Each exit point requires capacity to be booked for the gas that leaves the network. 

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Capacity for European connections

Our NTS is linked to overseas gas networks via interconnectors. These enable gas to be exported to or imported from continental Europe, and exported to Northern Ireland and Ireland. Capacity bookings are required to flow gas into or out of Great Britain using these interconnectors. 

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Important documents 

Find out more about different aspects of the capacity regime and access historical data: