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Natural Gas Weekly Update

for Week Ending July 18, 2012   |  Release date:  July 19, 2012   |  Next release:  July 26, 2012   |   Previous weeks

JUMP TO: In The News | Overview | Prices/Supply/Demand | Storage

In the News:

Marketed Production and Electric Power Generation Show Strong Growth in 2011.

Marketed production of natural gas rose by 7.9% year over year in 2011, to an average of 66.2 billion cubic feet (Bcf) per day, the largest year-over-year change since 1984, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration's recently released Natural Gas Year in Review. Despite falling natural gas rig counts, continued improvements in drilling efficiencies helped generate further production growth. Increased production in 2011 contributed to strength in storage inventories, as working stocks hit new records at the end of the injection season.

The electric power sector absorbed some of the increased supplies of natural gas, and continues to do so. Use of natural gas for electric power generation continued an overall upward trend, as natural gas prices fell both in absolute terms and relative to coal prices, providing an incentive for fuel substitution. Use of natural gas for electric power rose to 21.6 Bcf per day in 2011 from 21.0 Bcf per day in 2010. Major consuming regions in the eastern United States saw natural gas consumed for electric power generation significantly exceed the average of the previous five years.

Overview:

(For the Week Ending Wednesday, July 18, 2012)

  • Natural gas prices generally registered overall increases for the report week (Wednesday to Wednesday) at many of the country's trading locations. The Henry Hub price, which had gained 20 cents per million British thermal units (MMBtu) by Monday's close, fell Tuesday and rose modestly yesterday to close at $2.84 per MMBtu, up 12 cents for the week.
  • The natural gas futures market rebounded sharply after declining moderately from earlier in the reporting week. At the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), the August 2012 natural gas contract gained 12.0 cents per MMBtu to close at $2.973 per MMBtu yesterday.
  • Working natural gas in storage rose last week to 3,163 Bcf as of Friday, July 13, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration's (EIA) Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report (WNGSR). An implied storage build of 28 Bcf for the week positioned storage volumes 509 Bcf above year-ago levels.
  • The natural gas rotary rig count, as reported by Baker Hughes Incorporated on July 13, declined by 20 to 522 active units. Meanwhile, oil-directed rigs increased by 8 to 1,427 units.

more summary data

Prices:

The Henry Hub day-ahead price registered an overall increase for the week, rising sharply through Monday before declining on Tuesday and increasing modestly Wednesday, closing the week at $2.84 per MMBtu, up 4.4 percent. In the midwest and northeast, hotter-than-normal temperatures boosted prices over much of the reporting week, after which cooler weather helped generate reductions in end-of-week prices

At the NYMEX, the August 2012 contract ended the week higher, rising from $2.853 per MMBtu last Wednesday to $2.973 per MMBtu yesterday, an overall increase of 4.2 percent. Prices rose modestly on Thursday, reflecting, in part, a temporary return to above-normal temperatures for several parts of the nation. Prices declined on Monday and Tuesday before jumping nearly 18 cents yesterday. The 12-Month Strip (average of August 2012 to July 2013 contracts) also rose late last week before dipping Monday and Tuesday, then rebounding yesterday to close at $3.359 per MMBtu, up 4.8 cents per MMBtu (1.4 percent) for the week.

Prices at many downstream trading locations recorded overall increases, climbing on Thursday and Friday before dipping toward the end of the week. In the northeast, certain locations saw prices rise considerably before retreating by week's end. For example, at the Algonquin Citygate trading point, for delivery into Boston, spot prices started the reporting week at $3.40 per MMBtu, rose to $6.27 per MMBtu on Monday as temperatures were expected to approach 100 degrees (following transportation restrictions), then fell steadily to close yesterday at $3.52 per MMBtu (up 3.5 percent for the week). Prices at the Transcontinental Pipeline's Zone 6 trading point, which serves New York City markets rose from $2.93 per MMBtu last Wednesday to $3.42 per MMBtu on Monday (ahead of 100-degree peak temperatures), then declined to $3.08 per MMBtu by week's end (up 5.1 percent).

Total consumption for the report week registered an overall decrease, with slightly higher residential/commercial sector demand being offset by decreases in other sectors. According to estimates from BENTEK Energy LLC (Bentek), domestic natural gas consumption declined by 1.6 percent from last week, driven by a decrease of 2.7 percent in power sector consumption. Industrial and residential/commercial sector consumption ended the week relatively unchanged down 0.4 percent and up 0.2 percent, respectively. For the power sector, consumption exceeded levels for the same week last year by 15.7 percent.

Total supply for the week was essentially unchanged, registered an overall increase of 0.1 percent. According to Bentek estimates, domestic weekly dry gas production was also 0.1 percent lower than the previous week (although 4.0 percent above the same time last year). Imports from Canada rose by 2.7 percent, with increases in shipments to the northeast and midwest offsetting declines in the west. For the week, imports from Canada stand only 0.2 percent above year-ago volumes. Liquefied natural gas (LNG) sendout dropped sharply, down 19.8 percent from last week; sendout volumes remain well below (23.3 percent) year-ago levels.

more price data

Storage

Working natural gas in storage increased to 3,163 Bcf as of Friday, July 13, according to EIA's WNGSR. This represents an implied net injection of 28 Bcf from the previous week. This week's injection was 46 Bcf below the 5-year (2007-2011) injection of 74 Bcf, and 39 Bcf below last year's injection of 67 Bcf. Since April 27, injections of working natural gas into underground storage have fallen short of both year-ago levels and the 5-year average, although stocks remain well above historical levels. Inventories are currently 509 Bcf greater than last year at this time and 470 Bcf greater than the 5-year average.

All three storage regions posted increases this week.Inventories in the East, West, and Producing Regions increased by 23 Bcf (with the 5-year average net injection of 54 Bcf), 4 Bcf (with the 5-year average net injection of 10 Bcf), and 1 Bcf (with the 5-year average net injection of 11 Bcf), respectively. In the Producing Region, working natural gas inventories decreased 4 Bcf in salt cavern facilities and increased 5 Bcf in nonsalt cavern facilities.

Temperatures during the storage report week were 3.3 degrees warmer than the 30-year normal temperature and 0.6 degrees warmer than the same period last year. Temperatures in the lower 48 States averaged 78.1 degrees, compared to 77.6 last year and the 30-year normal of 74.9. During the week, all regions were warmer than normal, particularly the East North Central and Middle Atlantic Census divisions, which averaged 5.6 and 4.1 degrees, respectively, warmer than the 30-year normal.

more storage data

See also:

Difference in Natural Gas Consumption for Power Generation in 2011 from 5-Year (2006 - 2010) Average

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration based on Electric Power Monthly



Natural Gas Spot Prices
Spot Prices ($/MMBtu)
Thu,
12-Jul
Fri,
13-Jul
Mon,
16-Jul
Tue,
17-Jul
Wed,
18-Jul
Henry Hub
2.83
2.88
2.92
2.83
2.84
New York
3.09
3.18
3.42
3.27
3.08
Chicago
2.94
2.93
2.98
2.87
2.96
Cal. Comp. Avg,*
2.91
2.85
2.84
2.62
2.67
Futures ($/MMBtu)
August Contract
2.874
2.874
2.801
2.796
2.973
September Contract
2.869
2.869
2.793
2.786
2.950
*Avg. of NGI's reported prices for: Malin, PG&E citygate, and Southern California Border Avg.
Source: NGI's Daily Gas Price Index
Natural Gas Futures Prices


U.S. Natural Gas Supply - Gas Week: (7/11/12 - 7/18/12)
Percent change for week compared with:
 
last year
last week
Gross Production
3.98%
-0.10%
Dry Production
4.00%
-0.10%
Canadian Imports
0.17%
2.74%
      West (Net)
6.20%
-1.31%
      MidWest (Net)
-3.97%
4.13%
      Northeast (Net)
-2.73%
9.61%
LNG Imports
-23.28%
-19.77%
Total Supply
3.48%
0.07%
Source: BENTEK Energy LLC
U.S. Consumption - Gas Week: (7/11/12 - 7/18/12)
Percent change for week compared with:
 
last year
last week
U.S. Consumption
8.93%
-1.61%
Power
15.71%
-2.68%
Industrial
0.63%
-0.36%
Residential/Commercial
2.87%
0.15%
Total Demand
8.77%
-1.82%
Source: BENTEK Energy LLC
Natural Gas Supply


Weekly natural gas rig count and spot Henry Hub

active rigs$ per MMBtu

Source: Baker Hughes

Rigs
Fri, July 13, 2012
Change from
 
last week
last year
Oil Rigs
1,427
0.56%
40.87%
Natural Gas Rigs
522
-3.69%
-41.02%
Miscellaneous
4
0.00%
-42.86%
Rig Numbers by Type
Fri, July 13, 2012
Change from
 
last week
last year
Vertical
555
1.09%
-1.94%
Horizontal
1,166
-0.68%
7.37%
Directional
232
-4.13%
-8.30%
Source: Baker Hughes Inc.


Working Gas in Underground Storage
Stocks
billion cubic feet (bcf)
Region
7/13/12
7/6/12
change
East
1,555
1,532
23
West
488
484
4
Producing
1,120
1,119
1
Total
3,163
3,135
28
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration
Working Gas in Underground Storage
Historical Comparisons
Year ago
(7/13/11)
5-year average
(2007-2011)
Region
Stocks (Bcf)
% change
Stocks (Bcf)
% change
East
1,284
21.1
1,357
14.6
West
373
30.8
402
21.4
Producing
997
12.3
934
19.9
Total
2,654
19.2
2,693
17.5
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration


Temperature -- Heating & Cooling Degree Days (week ending Jul 12)
 
HDD deviation from:
 
CDD deviation from:
Region
HDD Current
normal
last year
CDD Current
normal
last year
New England
0
-1
0
52
14
-9
Middle Atlantic
0
-1
0
82
28
5
E N Central
0
-1
0
92
38
19
W N Central
0
-3
-1
91
23
8
South Atlantic
0
0
0
115
20
-1
E S Central
0
0
0
108
16
-11
W S Central
0
0
0
121
0
-34
Mountain
0
-7
0
94
19
16
Pacific
0
-5
-4
60
21
17
United States
0
-2
-1
92
21
3
Note: HDD = heating degree-day; CDD = cooling degree-day

Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Average temperature (°F)

7-Day Mean ending Jul 12, 2012

Mean Temperature (F) 7-Day Mean ending Jul 12, 2012

Source: NOAA/National Weather Service

Deviation between average and normal (°F)

7-Day Mean ending Jul 12, 2012

Mean Temperature Anomaly (F) 7-Day Mean ending Jul 12, 2012

Source: NOAA/National Weather Service

Monthly dry shale gas production

billion cubic feet per day

Source: Lippman Consulting, Inc. Gross withdrawal estimates are as of May 2012 and converted to dry production estimates with EIA-calculated average.