Oct Nymex natural gas (NGV22) on Tuesday closed up by +0.035 (+0.42%).
Oct nat-gas Wednesday posted moderate gains on the outlook for warmer U.S. temperatures to boost nat-gas demand from electricity suppliers to power air conditioning. The Commodity Weather Group said Tuesday that above-normal temperatures are forecast from Texas to New York from September 18-22. However, ramped-up U.S. nat-gas production limited gains in prices Tuesday after lower-48 state total gas production on Monday climbed to a record 101.1 bcf.
Lower-48 state total gas production on Tuesday was 98.6 bcf, up +5.8% y/y. Lower-48 state total gas demand on Tuesday was 66.6 bcf/day, down -1.6% y/y. LNG net flow to U.S. LNG export terminals Tuesday was 11.1 bcf/day, down -1.4% w/w.
An increase in U.S. electricity output is bullish for nat-gas demand from utility providers. The Edison Electric Institute reported last Thursday that total U.S. electricity output in the week ended Sep 3 rose +4.8% y/y to 88,595 GWh (gigawatt hours). Also, cumulative U.S. electricity output in the 52-week period ending Sep 3 rose +3.0% y/y to 4,122,790 GWh.
Nat-gas prices have support as EU countries agreed to cut nat-gas demand from Russia by 15% over the next eight months. Also, Russia recently slashed nat-gas exports to Europe to 20% of capacity, putting upward pressure on European nat-gas prices. Russia has already halted nat-gas shipments to Demark, Finland, Bulgaria, Netherlands, Poland, and Latvia and reduced supplies to Germany for not acceding to its demand for gas payments in Russian rubles.
Nat-gas prices have seen downward pressure from the prolonged outage at the Freeport LNG export terminal, which curbed U.S nat-gas exports and put upward pressure on domestic supplies. The Freeport terminal accounted for about 20% of all U.S. nat-gas exports before the explosion on June 8 knocked it offline. The Freeport LNG terminal receives about 2 bcf, or 2.5%, of the output from the lower-48 U.S. states. The Freeport terminal said Aug 23 that it won't reopen until early to mid-November, later than a previous announcement of a restart in October.
As a longer-term bullish factor, the ongoing drought in the U.S. West has drained rivers and reservoirs, with Lake Mead and Lake Powell falling to record lows. That threatens to curb power produced by hydropower dams and will prompt electric utilities in the U.S. West to boost usage of nat-gas to increase electricity to satisfy power demand for air-conditioning this summer. The U.S. Energy Information Administration said on June 1 that the drought could drive down generation at California's hydro dams between June and September to 7 million megawatt-hours, well below the 13 million megawatt-hour median for summer generation between 1980 and 2020.
Last Thursday's weekly EIA report was bullish for nat-gas prices as it showed U.S. nat gas inventories rose +54 bcf to 2,694 bcf in the week ended Sep 2, below expectations of a +55 bcf increase and the 5-year average gain for this time of year at +65 bcf. Inventories remain tight and are down -7.8% y/y and -11.5% below their 5-year seasonal average.
Baker Hughes reported last Friday that the number of active U.S. nat-gas drilling rigs in the week ended Sep 9 rose by +4 rigs to a new 3-year high of 166 rigs. Active rigs have more than doubled from the record low of 68 rigs posted in July 2020 (data since 1987).
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