http://ir.eia.gov/ngs/ngs.html
Working gas in storage was 1,606 Bcf as of Friday, June 6, 2014, according to EIA estimates. This represents a net increase of 107 Bcf from the previous week. Stocks were 727 Bcf less than last year at this time and 877 Bcf below the 5-year average of 2,483 Bcf. In the East Region, stocks were 411 Bcf below the 5-year average following net injections of 65 Bcf. Stocks in the Producing Region were 358 Bcf below the 5-year average of 962 Bcf after a net injection of 29 Bcf. Stocks in the West Region were 107 Bcf below the 5-year average after a net addition of 13 Bcf. At 1,606 Bcf, total working gas is below the 5-year historical range.
Injection has now been going on for a bit more than a month. Recent injections have been in the 100 to 125 bcf range, and a general trend is established. Generally speaking, the injection is proceeding more quickly than the 5 year average, and will likely be near the 5 year average by the end of the season, but available capacity will probably not "overfill" storage this year.
Hurricanes, Ukraine, etc are still wild cards. Enjoy the remainder of the last classical injection season.
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NYMEX Natural Gas Monthly Settlement Price for July - $4.40. Monthly average year to date - $4.745.
https://www.hessenergy.com/reports/nymexsettlementreport.aspx
I am in the sabine county area, do you know anything about Anchor drilling,, got a call today?
Joe, I suggest that you post your question in the Sabine County Group. When you do that all the members of the group get an email notifying them of the new reply or discussion. Use this link:
What do you mean by this?
Enjoy the remainder of the last classical injection season.
olddog, the monthly settlement price is the most meaningful NG price as it is the base for the bulk of actual gas sold. Futures are paper contracts for the purpose of trading and spot prices represent a smaller fraction of the gas sold each month. As I understand it if a customer runs out of gas bought on their monthly contract then they must buy additional supply based on spot prices. If they don't run out they never pay the spot price. Since the bulk of GHS members are most interested in the price of gas that appears on their monthly royalty statement, the settlement price is the best base price to follow. And a comparison of monthly average by year gives a good indication of how prices are trending.
Olddog - and anyone else still following -
http://www.ferc.gov/industries/gas/indus-act/lng/lng-approved.pdf
Right now, we have 2 approved export terminals - one under construction and one not yet under construction. The Sabine Pass LNG project should be nearing operational status at about 1 BCF/day toward the end of the 2015 injection season. an additional 1 BCF is likely to come online in late 2016, with even more coming online in 2017.
When the 2015 season starts, we should know how many other approved projects are out there, the construction status on many, and the market will have to price that in.
For the 2 current approved projects, the daily capacity is 4 BCF/day, when fully built. That is roughly 1200 BCF/year, which is a large fraction of the storage capacity.
Olddog,
Doesn't sound greedy
Mike R -
With continued drilling in the Marcellus and Utica, as well as moves to stop Bakken flaring, I think we will still be oversupplied next injection season. I think its 2016, a projects come online, that Haynesville gas drilling actually picks up meaningfully. And remember, cross unit laterals, as well as improved fracture design, and faster drilling times mean that we can produce more gas with the same number of rigs than even 2-3 years ago.
Start of construction on the second export terminal and/or approval of a third east coast/Gulf Coast terminal with firm commitment to build will put some type of floor on the 2015 pricing IMHO,
The injection rates are higher than we have seen, but not significantly so. Over the past several years the injection rate has experienced a decrease starting around 1st week of July caused by the increased usage for air conditioning. This spring has been very cool in the US, which increased the late winter draw-down, but has also increased the injection rate this spring. I have projected the current high injection rate and it is on trend to fill storage to normal levels by the end of the injection season (green). The red projection projects at the rate of the 2nd half injection rate from last year. It result in a shortfall of about 600 BCF. The black projection extends the peak rate (1st half injection rate) from 2013, which results in about 200-300 BCF shortfall.
We will have to wait and see, but if the summer heats up to levels we have seen over the past several years, injection will struggle to achieve storage fill-up by the end of the injection season.
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