Natural gas report week October 13, 2022.
This week’s injection of 125 Bcf was in line with analysts’ expectations which ranged from 116 Bcf to 137 Bcf. Comparatively, last year’s injection was 86 Bcf and the five-year average of net injections is 82 Bcf. Current storage totals 3,231 Bcf which is 6.4% below the five-year average but still within the five-year historical range.
Demand
Overall demand grew for the first time in four weeks, adding 2.1 Bcf/d. Consumption for power generation rose by 1.3 Bcf/d while residential-commercial demand grew by 0.8 Bcf/d. The LNG export ship count declined by one, totaling 19 for an overall capacity of 70 Bcf.
Production
Production added 0.4 Bcf/d over last week. The natural gas rig count dropped by one, totaling 158 rigs. Oil-directed rigs fell by 2, for a total of 602.
Storage Forecast
The average rate of injections into storage is 3% higher than the five-year average at this point in refill season (which traditionally runs April through October). If the injection rate matches the five-year average of 8.0 Bcf/d through October 31, natural gas supply will total 3,424 Bcf, 221 Bcf lower than the five-year average of 3,645 Bcf.
This week, the EIA published their Winter Fuels Outlook, including the annual natural gas retail price forecast. Key takeaways:
Settled Thursday at $6.741/Dth up 30.6 cents from Wednesday’s close at $6.435/Dth.
Settled Thursday at $5.888/Dth, up 7.5 cents from the prior week.
The winter strip (NOV22-MAR23) settled Thursday at $6.992/Dth, up 11.0 cents from last week while the summer strip (APR23-OCT23) settled at $4.970/Dth, up 13.6 cents from last week.
Calendar Years 2022/2023/2024
Settled Thursday at $89.11/barrel, up 66.0 cents from the prior week.
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