The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas spot price rose US$0.31/million British thermal units to $3.19/MMBtu in the week ended May 20, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.
Temperatures across most of the U.S. were slightly above average this week, the EIA noted.
U.S. natural gas consumption fell 0.9 billion cubic feet per day week over week, according to LSEG Data. The decline was driven by lower residential and commercial gas use, the EIA said.
U.S. natural gas supply declined 0.2 Bcf/d, according to data from LSEG, due to a small reduction in net Canadian imports.
Net injections into storage amounted to 101 Bcf for the week ending May 15, resulting in total working natural gas stocks of 2,391 Bcf. This was 149 Bcf more than the five-year average and 33 Bcf more than the year-ago period.
The liquefied natural gas-carrying capacity of vessels departing the U.S. was 128 Bcf, down 13 Bcf from the previous week. Thirty-four LNG vessels left the U.S., down three vessels from a week ago amid liquefaction plant and pipeline maintenance that restricted output at some LNG terminals.