EIA - Natural Gas Storage Report - Feb 16
Posted: Thu Feb 16, 2023 11:36 am
Working gas in storage was 2,266 Bcf as of Friday, February 10, 2023, according to EIA estimates.
This represents a net decrease of 100 Bcf from the previous week. < Compares to my WAG of 150 Bcf.
Stocks were 328 Bcf higher than last year at this time and 183 Bcf above the five-year average of 2,083 Bcf.
At 2,266 Bcf, total working gas is within the five-year historical range.
There are 7 more weeks of draws from storage to get to March 31.
My updated WAG for the storage level on March 31, 2023 is 1,671 Bcf. < Compares to the 5-year average of 1,540 Bcf.
A colder than normal March and getting the Freeport LNG export facility back online would push natural gas prices higher. Regardless, of where ngas storage is on March 31, there is not a "glut" of natural gas in the U.S. market. As we learned from the Comstock conference call yesterday, the "gassers" will be reducing their active rig count and holding off on completing new wells into a low priced gas market. Market Forces will balance the U.S. gas market. LNG prices in Asia and Europe are currently over $17.00/MMBtu, so demand for U.S. LNG will remain HIGH all year.
Here are the natural gas prices that I will be using in all of my undated forecast models:
2023
Q1 > $2.50
Q2 > $2.75
Q3 > $3.25 < by Q3 the utilities will be back in the futures market
Q4 > $3.50
2024 >> $4.00
This represents a net decrease of 100 Bcf from the previous week. < Compares to my WAG of 150 Bcf.
Stocks were 328 Bcf higher than last year at this time and 183 Bcf above the five-year average of 2,083 Bcf.
At 2,266 Bcf, total working gas is within the five-year historical range.
There are 7 more weeks of draws from storage to get to March 31.
My updated WAG for the storage level on March 31, 2023 is 1,671 Bcf. < Compares to the 5-year average of 1,540 Bcf.
A colder than normal March and getting the Freeport LNG export facility back online would push natural gas prices higher. Regardless, of where ngas storage is on March 31, there is not a "glut" of natural gas in the U.S. market. As we learned from the Comstock conference call yesterday, the "gassers" will be reducing their active rig count and holding off on completing new wells into a low priced gas market. Market Forces will balance the U.S. gas market. LNG prices in Asia and Europe are currently over $17.00/MMBtu, so demand for U.S. LNG will remain HIGH all year.
Here are the natural gas prices that I will be using in all of my undated forecast models:
2023
Q1 > $2.50
Q2 > $2.75
Q3 > $3.25 < by Q3 the utilities will be back in the futures market
Q4 > $3.50
2024 >> $4.00