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Sectors

U.S. Henry Hub Spot Price Rises in Week Ended June 10, EIA Reports

The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub spot price rose US$0.31/million British thermal units to $3.26/MMBtu in the week ended June 10, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.Total U.S. natural gas consumption increased by 2.7 billion cubic feet per day week over week, led by a 10% rise in the electric power sector due to above-normal temperatures across the Northern and Central U.S., the EIA said.U.S. natural gas supply declined 0.5 Bcf/d, driven by lower dry natural gas production, the EIA reported, citing LSEG Data.The LNG-carrying capacity of vessels departing the U.S. was 129 Bcf, up 18 Bcf week over week. Thirty-four LNG vessels left the U.S., five vessels more than in the previous week.Net injections into storage amounted to 108 Bcf for the week ended June 5, resulting in total working gas stocks of 2,686 Bcf, according to EIA estimates. This was 151 Bcf more than the five-year average and 5 Bcf lower than the year-ago period.

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International

U.S. EIA Reduces 2026 Global Oil Demand Forecast Amid High Prices, Reduced Availability

The U.S. Energy Information Administration lowered its forecast for global oil demand in 2026 in its June Short-Term Energy Outlook released Tuesday, citing high fuel prices, reduced fuel availability and government initiatives.The reduced global demand, particularly in Asia, could limit oil price increases resulting from near-term disruptions in oil flows out of the Middle East due to the war, the EIA said. The world is expected to consume 1 million fewer barrels of oil per day on average year over year."Any scenario involving full restoration of inventories, production, and trade flows to pre-conflict levels must account for the partial restructuring of the global oil market that has already occurred," EIA Administrator Tristan Abbey said.Brent crude oil prices are expected to average US$95/barrel in 2026, falling to $79/barrel in 2027 when supply flows and oil production resume.Natural gas prices at Henry Hub are forecast to average $3.60 in 2026 and $3.46 in 2027. Supply growth continues to outpace demand, lowering prices in the EIA's outlook from earlier forecasts, according to the agency.

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Sectors

U.S. Dry Natural Gas Production Rose 3.3% YoY in March, EIA Reports

Preliminary dry natural gas production rose 3.3% year over year to 110.9% billion cubic feet per day in March, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Natural Gas Monthly Report released Friday.Estimated natural gas consumption in March was 89.6 Bcf/d, up 1% from the year-ago period. The average daily rate of gas consumption fell in three of the four consuming sectors, the EIA said.Residential deliveries fell 8.7% to 15.5 Bcf/d. Commercial deliveries were 11.3 Bcf/d, down 4.4%. Industrial deliveries were 23.9 Bcf/d, falling 0.5%. Electric power deliveries rose 10.6% to 29.6 Bcf/d.Net natural gas exports were 21.0 Bcf/d, with imports down 9.1% to 7.7 Bcf/d and exports up 18.3% to 28.7 Bcf/d, according to the agency.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Edge Lower in Week Ended May 27, EIA Reports

The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas spot price fell US$0.04/million British thermal units to $3.15/MMBtu in the week ended May 27, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.Temperatures across most of the U.S. during the report week remained near normal for this time of year. U.S. natural gas consumption rose 1.2 billion cubic feet per day as electric power sector use rose, the EIA said, citing LSEG Data.U.S. natural gas supply also edged higher by 0.2 Bcf/d due to a slight increase in dry natural gas production, according to the agency.Net injections into storage amounted to 92 Bcf for the week ended May 22, resulting in total working gas stocks of 2,483 Bcf, the EIA reported. This was 144 Bcf more than the five-year average and 21 Bcf more than the year-ago period.For the week ended May 27, the liquefied natural gas-carrying capacity of vessels departing the U.S. was 121 Bcf, down 7 Bcf week over week. Thirty-two LNG vessels left the U.S., down two vessels from the previous week, the EIA said.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Spot Prices Rise in Week Ended May 20 Amid Higher Temperatures, EIA Reports

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.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Rise in Week Ended May 13 Amid Near-Normal Temperatures, EIA Reports

The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas spot price rose US$0.13 per million British thermal units to $2.88/MMBtu in the week ended May 13, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.Temperatures across the country remained near normal overall, limiting heating and cooling needs, the EIA noted.U.S. natural gas demand edged lower by 0.5 billion cubic feet per day week over week, led by a decline in residential and commercial consumption and slightly offset by a rise in electric power sector demand, the EIA said.U.S. natural gas supply increased 1.0 Bcf/d, led by higher dry natural gas production, the EIA reported, citing LSEG Data.Net injections into storage amounted to 85 Bcf for the week ended May 8, resulting in total working gas stocks of 2,290 Bcf. This was 140 Bcf more than the five-year average and 51 Bcf more than the year-ago period.The LNG-carrying capacity of vessels departing U.S. ports was 141 Bcf, up 26 Bcf from the previous week. Thirty-seven LNG vessels left the country, an increase of seven vessels week over week, the EIA reported.

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International

U.S. Energy Production Sets New Record in 2025 for 4th Consecutive Year, EIA Reports

U.S. energy production hit a new record high of 107 quadrillion British thermal units in 2025, up 3.4% from the previous record set in 2024, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in a Monday note, citing its most recent Monthly Energy Review.Production was driven by record-high production in natural gas, crude oil, natural gas plant liquids and renewables, the EIA noted. This was the fourth consecutive year of record energy production for the U.S.Dry natural gas output rose more than 4% year over year to 39 trillion cubic feet in 2025, with most of the growth occurring in the Appalachia, Permian and Haynesville regions, the EIA said.Crude oil production grew 3% to 13.6 million barrels per day from 2024. Most of the growth comes from the Permian region of western Texas and southeastern New Mexico.Production of NGPLs, or hydrocarbons separated as liquids during natural gas processing, climbed 7% to 4 trillion cubic feet year over year. Like oil and natural gas output, NGPLs production also hit a new record in 2025, according to the agency.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Production Climbed Nearly 5% YoY in February, EIA Reports

U.S. dry natural gas production rose 4.9% year over year to 110.0 billion cubic feet per day in February on a preliminary basis, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported in its Natural Gas Monthly report released Thursday.Natural gas consumption was 111.1 Bcf/d, down 3.8% from the year-ago period, the EIA reported. The average daily rate of dry gas consumption fell in three of the four consuming sectors.Residential deliveries dropped 9.5% to 25.7 Bcf/d, commercial deliveries fell 10.0% to 15.8 Bcf/d, and industrial deliveries decreased 2.2% to 25.6 Bcf/d. Meanwhile, electric power deliveries rose 1.6% to 33.8 Bcf/d, according to the agency.Net natural gas exports were 18.1 Bcf/d. The U.S. exported 2.8 times more gas than it imported in February as natural gas imports decreased while exports increased year over year.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Fall in Week Ended April 29, EIA Reports

The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas spot price fell US$0.16 to $2.60/million British thermal units in the week ended April 29, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.Total U.S. natural gas demand declined 2%, LSEG Data showed, driven by lower residential and commercial consumption despite an increase in natural gas use in the electric power sector, the EIA reported.Natural gas supply edged lower by 0.3% due to a decrease in dry production, according to the agency.Net injections into storage amounted to 79 billion cubic feet in the week ended April 24, resulting in total working gas stocks of 2,142 Bcf, according to EIA estimates. This was 153 Bcf more than the five-year average and 116 Bcf more than the year-ago period.For the week ended April 29, the liquefied natural gas-carrying capacity of vessels departing the U.S. was 133 Bcf, down 1 Bcf week over week, the EIA reported. Thirty-five LNG vessels left the U.S., unchanged from the previous week.

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International

U.S. Energy Production Climbs 3% YoY in January, EIA Reports

U.S. primary energy production rose 3% year over year in January to 9.1 quadrillion British thermal units, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Monthly Energy Review released Monday.Total fossil fuels production in January was made up of 46% dry natural gas, 31% crude oil, 12% crude oil and 11% natural gas plant liquids, the EIA reported.Total renewable energy production was composed of 56% biomass, 20% wind, 12% hydroelectric power, 11% solar and 1% geothermal energy, according to the agency.U.S. natural gas plant liquids production was 7% higher in January than in the year-ago month. Dry natural gas production and renewable energy production each climbed 4%. Nuclear electric power production and coal production each increased 2%. Crude oil production rose 1%.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Fall in Week Ended April 15 Amid Warmer Temperatures, EIA Reports

The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas spot price fell US$0.05 to $2.75/million British thermal units in the week ended April 15, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.The price last Friday of $2.65/MMBtu was the lowest since June 2025, the EIA noted.U.S. natural gas demand dropped 6.8 billion cubic feet per day week over week, the agency said, citing LSEG Data. The decrease was mainly driven by a 31% reduction in demand from the residential and commercial sector.U.S. natural gas supply also decreased, primarily due to a 1% drop in dry production, according to the agency. On balance, average demand fell more than supply, contributing to lower spot natural gas prices.Temperatures were warmer across the U.S. during the report week, and the relatively comfortable conditions are reducing natural gas demand for heating and cooling, the EIA said.Also, net injections into storage amounted to 59 Bcf in the week ended April 10, resulting in total working gas stocks of 1,970 Bcf, the EIA reported. This was 108 Bcf more than the five-year average and 126 Bcf more than the year-ago period.The liquefied natural gas-carrying capacity of vessels departing U.S. ports was 133 Bcf in the week ended April 15, down 7 Bcf week over week. Thirty-five LNG vessels left the U.S., down two vessels from the previous week, the EIA said.

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Sectors

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Fell in Week Ended April 8 Amid Above-Average Temperatures, EIA Reports

The U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas price dropped US$0.19 to $2.80/million British thermal units in the week ended April 8, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report Supplement released Thursday.Above-average temperatures across most of the country kept daily natural gas demand relatively low for this time of year by limiting heating and cooling needs, the EIA noted.Still, natural gas demand across sectors rose 1.3 billion cubic feet per day week over week, the EIA reported, citing LSEG Data.Net injections into storage amounted to 50 Bcf in the week ended April 3, resulting in total working gas stocks of 1,911 Bcf, according to the agency. This was 87 Bcf more than the five-year average and 89 Bcf more than the year-ago period.The liquefied natural gas-carrying capacity of vessels departing U.S. ports was 141 Bcf, down 8 Bcf from the previous week. Thirty-seven LNG vessels left the U.S., down two vessels week over week, the EIA said.

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