Full article here.

 

Excerpted:

Is the Worst of Winter Over?


By Heather Buchman, Meteorologist
Jan 4, 2011; 2:09 PM ET

Winter has gotten off to a nasty start for the U.S. with December's extreme snow, rain and cold shattering records from coast to coast.

For some, the worst of winter is over, but for others, there is more to come.

<snip>

(Video clip is here.)

 

Where the worst of winter is not over yet, Bastardi says, is areas from the Pacific Northwest to the Great Lakes and farther south to about I-80 across the Plains. He says, "[There is] a lot of cold coming this
month with the threat of such extremes as snow in Seattle and Portland and a subzero day from Chicago to Omaha."

"So I don't think the worst is over for these areas," Bastardi added, "in fact, far from it."

New England is another region which Bastardi thinks the worst of winter is not yet over. He says Boston could be hit by another big snowstorm like the one that clobbered the East Coast on Dec. 26-27,
2010.

Tags: severe, weather, winter

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Bring it.....every little bit helps...or at least is suppose to.  January natgas contract were depressing.  Thanks for post.
I think the news of weather events won't have much effect on NG prices. Aren't those price fluctuation generally driven by speculators betting on potential shortages? I mean it would take a lot more than just a cold snap to get someone to bet their money on scarce NG supplies, huh?

I would agree with you if we didn't already have such record breaking cold back in December. Now, some are saying this might be the coldest Janurary since the early 1980s. Currently we're 8.2% above the 5 year average and they are expecting a much bigger withdrawl on Thurs that should hopefully wittle it down even more to 7.7% (being optimistic with that number). Throw in record breaking cold in the heart of the winter this month that is sustained for 3 weeks according to the numerous weather outlooks, I'll venture to say we won't be anywhere near the record storage you speak of at the end of the winter.

 

Also, throw in an improving economy. Have you seen some of the economic reports over the last couple week? Our recovery is gaining steam which should only help to increase our NG demand.

 

October's Natural Gas Production actually even declined in the lower 48 per the last EIA report. Granted that could be a fluke OR it could be due to the decline in shale wells and the US Gas Rig Count has dropped 4 straight weeks to a 10 month low.

 

I have been quite bearish on gas prices for the last 6 months but we may (hope) be seeing a sign of a life in the nat gas market. I'm hoping we can continue to catch these short sellers with their pants down and they keep having to cover their bets.

If they could get China to buy up NG like they are buying up Oil...
Wouldn't that be something.
Scott, geat analysis.  I'm no expert but what has confused me is that keeping in mind last winter was above the norm frigid, we currently have lower storage than last year yet we are roughly 30% below last year's prices.  The two not correlating is hard to understand.  If anything, I'd expect a slight increase in pricing from the same time last year.
How high would oil prices be if they had oil fields all over the place being shut in due to over supply? Maybe the perception of the speculators is that any dip in NG storage supplies could be restored too easily. Easily enough that it wouldn't make a good bet with their money anyway..
Good point. Let's just hope the operators don't pick up the rig count until prices reach a sustainable level.
Another great withdrawl this week. Surplus narrowed to 6.5% from 8.2%. Definitely heading in the right direction with the heart of winter approaching quickly. And we have extreme cold coming that could be around during most of the month. 
storage is ~200 bcf below last year at this time (but still ~200 bcf above 5 year avg) with a colder Jan-Feb expected this year the draw down should go below 5 year storage avg next month if not sooner and that should boost NG above $6 by March. The NG rig count continue to slowly drop as rigs move to oil and wet gas fields out of dry shale gas except drilling to hold leases.

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