Russia has restarted gas supplies to Europe through its greatest pipeline, Nord Stream 1, following a 10-day upkeep break.
There had been fears Moscow might not have continued the stream because of EU sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine.
On Wednesday, the European Commission asked nations to cut gas use by 15% over the course of the following seven months in the event that Russia turned off Europe's stock.
Russia provided Europe with 40% of its flammable gas the year before.
Germany was the mainland's biggest merchant in 2020, yet has decreased its reliance on Russian gas from 55% to 35%. In the long run, it needs to prevent utilizing gas from Russia out and out.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin has tried to make light of fears, letting journalists know that state gas firm Gazprom would satisfy all its legally binding commitments.
The pipeline continued tasks from the get-go Thursday morning, yet a representative said it was just conveying 40% of its ability.
This is a similar level it was working at in mid-June when Gazprom cut gas streams accusing a defer in the arrival of gear being overhauled by Germany's Siemens Energy.