Natural gas prices rose on Monday as long-term forecasts see hot weather coming for eastern states, offering a boost to cooling demand.
Gas for July delivery was last seen up 1% to US$3.27 per million British thermal units.
The rise comes as long-term forecasts from the National Weather Service expect most states east of the Rocky Mountains to see hotter than seasonal weather over its six to 14 day outlook, offering a boost to demand for power on higher air-conditioning use.
The rise comes even as supply remains robust. The Energy Information Administration on Thursday reported inventories of gas stored for winter use rose by 73-billion cubic feet, near expectations, leaving inventories at 2.76-trillion cubic feet, 5.8% above the five-year average.