A Natural Gas Shortage Is Looming For The US

Authored by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,

  • As natural gas demand around the world breaks new records, U.S. shale producers are struggling to keep up with demand.
  • While natural gas prices in the United States fell after a railway strike was averted last week, it looks likely that prices both at home and abroad will spike this winter.
  • A hotter-than-expected summer and a lack of alternative energy sources have left U.S. inventories below the seasonal average.

Last week, the media rushed to report that natural gas prices in the United States had fallen sharply after trade unions and railway companies reached a tentative deal that averted a potentially devastating strike.

Indeed, natural gas prices fell by nearly a dollar per million British thermal units, helped by a respectable build in inventories. And yet, inventories remain below the seasonal average, exports are running at record rates, and producers are beginning to struggle to meet demand, both at home and abroad.

Reuters’ John Kemp wrote in a recent column that domestic and international gas consumption had risen to record highs, and shale producers—the ones that account for the bulk of U.S. natural gas output—were having a hard time catching up with this demand.

Meanwhile, although higher on a weekly basis, inventories remained at the second-lowest for this time of the year for the last 12 years, Reuters’ market analyst noted. He also added there were no signs of any improvement in the level of inventories despite the rise in prices.

None of this suggests lower prices for natural gas are coming to either the United States or international markets as the northern hemisphere heads into winter. On the contrary, the latest figures suggest more financial pain for gas consumers. And they confirm, to an extent, forecasts made earlier this year.

In the spring, the principals of investment firm Goehring & Rozencwajg said U.S. gas prices will converge with international prices towards the end of 2022. They noted something few other analysts tend to mention: the concentration of much of U.S. gas production in a handful of fields, with just two—Marcellus and Haynesville—accounting for as much as 40 percent of the total.

The Permian contributes another 12 percent of the U.S. total gas output, and the rig count in the Permian has been down for two weeks in a row, according to the latest data. Less drilling means less associated gas to add to the national total.

Meanwhile, on the demand side, electricity generation in the United States is seen reaching a record high this year, Kemp noted in his column, driven by the post-pandemic economic rebound. A hotter summer also contributed. A cold winter would certainly push gas consumption even higher.

Another contributor is the lack of alternative sources of electricity generation: coal plants are being retired, and droughts in many parts of the country have compromised its hydropower capacity, the Reuters analyst also noted.

While this is happening at home, demand for gas continues strong across the globe, too, as everyone seeks to stock up on fuel for the winter. U.S. energy companies are exporting liquefied natural gas at record rates. And disgruntlement at home is beginning to rear its head.

“We appreciate that the [Joe] Biden administration has been working with European allies to expand fuel exports to Europe. A similar effort should be made for New England,” a group of governors from New England wrote in a letter to Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm this summer, per a Financial Times report.

The governors then went on to call on the administration to make sure there was enough LNG for American consumers, essentially asking politicians to reduce LNG exports. This does not bode well for balance in the U.S. gas market.

In May, John Kilduff from Again Capital told CNBC he expected gas prices to top $10 per mmBtu and maybe reach $12 to $14.

“This is a commodity that trades parabolically a lot. It’s no stranger to parabolic moves up and down. It’s incredibly volatile, and it also has the ability to reset. We could get to $10 or $12 and if you have a cool August, then you could be down below $8 again,” he said at the time.

The Energy Information Administration this month revised its gas price forecast for the full year upwards, seeing the commodity average $9 per mmBtu in the final quarter before falling to $6 per mmBtu in 2023. The decline would come as a result of rising local gas production, the EIA noted.

In the meantime, however, until this increase in production materializes to a degree that begins to affect prices, there seems to be only one way they will be going: up. With heating season around the corner in both Europe and the United States and with a lot of people in both places using gas for heating, the price outlook for gas does not look good from a consumer’s perspective. It does look good from a gas exporter’s perspective, however.

It is unlikely that U.S. gas prices will climb anywhere near European levels, but they are up by a whopping 300 percent from a few years ago when gas was cheap because it was abundant. That sort of price increase affects everything along the supply chain that involves electricity produced using gas, sending ripples across the economy. And the more gas utilities use for lack of reliable alternatives, the longer the energy-driven inflation will continue.

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24 Comments
Ooze the other one
Ooze the other one
September 21, 2022 4:58 pm

The Oilprice article doesn’t mention expansion of power generation capabilities installed recently which will likely increase commecial demand for natural gas.

One example from August 2021:

Salt River Project announced a planned expansion of the Coolidge Generating Station, which currently generates enough energy to serve about 150,000 homes.

The expansion would cost nearly $900 million and add 16 more natural gas-powered turbines to provide energy to 200,000 additional households.

SRP officials say the expansion is necessary to accommodate power usage during peak hours — the heart of the Arizona summer.

Paleocon
Paleocon
September 21, 2022 4:59 pm

If you have gas heat and are on the nuclear power grid, electric space heaters will save you lots of money.

Sheeple will be sheeple
Sheeple will be sheeple
September 21, 2022 5:15 pm

If they didn’t get you with the clotshot they’ll just starve/freeze you.

Zedder
Zedder
  Sheeple will be sheeple
September 21, 2022 6:27 pm

I hope I warrant at least 4 or 5 machine gun drones.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Zedder
September 22, 2022 11:10 am

A Hellfire drone is the ultimate.

brian
brian
  TN Patriot
September 22, 2022 11:31 am

Those are reserved for terrorist and families filling and potentially transporting dangerous materials such as Dihydrogen oxide

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  brian
September 22, 2022 2:15 pm

Of course, before the Hellfire is released, you will get an “impartial” review. Due process must be followed dontchaknow.

ICE-9
ICE-9
September 21, 2022 5:33 pm

The same thing will happen to the USA that happened to eastern Australia about 10 years ago after they commissioned the east coast coal seam LNG liquefaction plants.

These several plants were granted FID on the basis they would be wholly supplied by coal seam gas drilling and completion projects – entirely greenfield. Never mind there weren’t enough drilling rigs and pressure pumping spreads in the country to get anywhere near the supply volume needed to fulfill the LNG sales contracts. So once the first few LNG shipments leave, there isn’t enough coal seam gas to meet the sales obligations (and never will be) so Shell, ConocoPhillips, and Santos start to bid up domestic gas from the nearby Surat and Eromanga Basins.

Since all states except NSW went green and quit generating electricity with coal (which is everywhere and cheap up and down the east coast), power generation companies had to competitively bid for domestic natural gas with the Shell, ConocoPhillips, and Santos LNG liquefaction plants. This drove the price of domestic gas and thus electricity up about 600 – 8oo% to the point where Victoria and Queensland – which both banned coal power generation – began bidding up the price of coal fired electricity from NSW.

Energy prices have been artificially high in Australia for over 10 years now due to green environmental policies. Gas fired power generation companies can’t afford basic maintenance and brownouts are common. Now, due to the “Stand with Ukraine” surcharge on everything, Australian states are starting to curtail domestic gas into the east coast LNG plants to increase domestic gas supply and lower cost to residential customers but that puts LNG sales contract deliveries at risk of force majure, risks the LNG investments return (massively over budget), and points to a looming domestic gas clusterfuck along the Australian east coast. What makes this so incredible is that they are literally swimming in high quality anthracite coal but can’t burn a BTU outside of NSW.

Once USA LNG plants start drawing down large amounts of USA domestic gas supply we will see similar situation to eastern Australia. I Stand with Ukraine is about to get very expensive as more and more LNG cargoes leave the USA bound for our “allies” in Europe, but then that is the whole point of the Phase II demand destruction required to quell the hyperinflation and buy TPTB time to transition us from our current fake fiat currency into the new fake digital fiat currency.

In the battle for control of the world there are no rules.

Ken31`
Ken31`
  ICE-9
September 21, 2022 8:00 pm

I don’t think anyone is going to rebel until the power goes all the way off.

m
m
  ICE-9
September 22, 2022 3:05 am

You should check out what happened in Ukraine after 2014, to natural gas and electricity prices.

Hint: pensioners in UA suddenly had to use all their retirement income on heating, during the winter months. (How did they survive? Their kids gave them money to buy food.) So where did the increased revenue of utilities go to? Now that is where it gets really interesting…

Fraizer
Fraizer
September 21, 2022 6:07 pm

The problem in the Marcellus is not production capacity, it is pipeline takeaway capacity. Likewise, New England can’t get enough gas because New York will not allow a pipeline.

Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay
  Fraizer
September 21, 2022 6:22 pm

Marcellus is under my feet as I type. When Tiny Tom was elected governor of PA almost overnight the drilling rigs were warehoused or moved elsewhere. Rumor is there are many mothballed just across the NY state line waiting for permission to drill.

Tiny Tom has done everything in his power to stop fracking. 1st using environmental laws to stop drillers. Then freezing or denying permits for new pipelines. Then lastly trying to extort a fee per BTU pulled out of the ground that will make its way to Filthadelphia or Pittsburgh instead of staying in the community the gas came from. Gas comes from the forgotten part of the state, forgotten until politicians smelled money.

All over there are wells drilled and ready to go but they cannot move the gas once it is out of the ground. In the pre-Tiny Tom boom times many dirt poor dairy farmers became millionaires just on the lease without pumping royalties. $2200/acre monthly was the going rate with a % off production. Now, many of those leases have run out and aren’t being renewed at generous rates because they cannot move the gas.

Ken31`
Ken31`
  Arizona Bay
September 21, 2022 8:01 pm

It seems like they don’t want us to have affordable energy, because they don’t.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Arizona Bay
September 22, 2022 11:12 am

They are now using ESG to keep capital out of the carbon energy market. Go green, get funding; go carbon, no funding for you.

ICE-9
ICE-9
  Fraizer
September 21, 2022 6:42 pm

About 85% of shale “PUDs” are non-commercial when assessed in the aggregate from a full investment lifecycle basis. Oil Cos were stuck in the fallacy of forward cost prior to 2019 and they do not dare admit that their “reserve” base will lose them money because as oil / gas prices go up, so too do services, supplies, manpower etc.

The “game” was to issue high yield junk bonds to buy the land access and get the drilling started and then continually roll over the debt at lower and lower interest rates with each round of interest rate reduction “savings” going into the next round of wells and share buy-backs that artificially inflated share prices. Share prices didn’t go up as a result of increasing profits, they went up due to buy-backs. It was a giant DO LOOP – issue debt, drill and declare overblown “reserve” estimates, drill some wells to generate some cash flow, use overblown “reserves” estimates to issue more debt, use debt to buy back shares – lather rinse repeat until you couldn’t.

Shale was one of the biggest investment scams of all time. Yes it made lots of oil and gas but didn’t generate any profits. Why do you think Oil Cos aren’t drilling like crazy at these high oil prices? Because the minute they start spending money without the ability to roll the debt over into lower interest rate instruments they start to lose money.

Ooze the other one
Ooze the other one
  ICE-9
September 21, 2022 7:11 pm

Thanks for the insight. Tight shale in AK has zero chance of ever being developed due to the realities you describe. Too bad, since, AFAIK, the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System already has the infrastructure in place to expand the existing Alaska Pipeline with a second export line adjacent to the one already in operation.

Ken31`
Ken31`
  Ooze the other one
September 21, 2022 8:13 pm

Never say never. At some point after we are dead, there will be an energy crunch as consumption outpaces the natural generation of these slowly renewing resources. Or maybe it happens quickly, if it did they would not tell us.

At some price point all energy is worth extracting, but that implies a greater percentage of wealth going to energy, so say goodbye to the McMansion.

Ken31`
Ken31`
  ICE-9
September 21, 2022 8:04 pm

I used to own many k shares of CHK when it traded near penny stock levels. Just look at them now. Too bad I didn’t leave open that position, when I said adios to the casino.

B_MC
B_MC
September 21, 2022 6:28 pm

While natural gas prices in the United States fell after a railway strike was averted last week, it looks likely that prices both at home and abroad will spike this winter.

Not so fast….

Deal averting railroad strike has potential to fall apart

But nearly 36 hours after the agreement was announced, rail workers said they still didn’t have concrete details on sick leave and voluntarily assigned days off. That’s raised some doubts about just how strong the new contract language is.

Ron Kaminkow, an organizer at Railroad Workers United, which represents rank-and-file railroaders, said that there’s “a lot of anger, confusion and hostility” toward the new agreement, which many workers feel is intentionally vague.

“Workers are pissed off and this time we actually have a lot of leverage,” said a locomotive engineer at Norfolk Southern who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation. “I know I’m not going to accept anything less than what we deserve.”

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/3646845-deal-averting-railroad-strike-has-potential-to-fall-apart/

And….

Rail Strike USA

The biggest thing in the world now is energy/food. Nothing else comes close. Nothing. Example — if rail strike happens in America, the outcomes likely will be war-time-level devastation. Coal and Corn. No coal, no power, no water.

This is harvest time. Food needs to move along rail. Many people say famine cannot happen in America. Every person who says that is wrong.

My estimation is that strikes will occur. This estimate is not based on bullshit ‘analysis’ of fascist-media reports but on the fact-pattern and previous actions of The Beast.

https://michaelyon.locals.com/upost/2763799/rail-strike-usa

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  B_MC
September 22, 2022 11:15 am

My estimation is that strikes will occur. This estimate is not based on bullshit ‘analysis’ of fascist-media reports but on the fact-pattern and previous actions of The Beast.

A VERY astute observation.

Lucredius
Lucredius
  B_MC
September 22, 2022 12:10 pm

Agreed. When I go to my watering hole and step outside for a choker, I watch the UP trains go across the dry lake bed. Usually every 15- 20 min., yesterday, none! I was there for 3+ hrs.

Putin it where it counts
Putin it where it counts
September 22, 2022 7:46 am

We’re past peak cheap gas/oil

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
September 22, 2022 11:18 am

The US is sitting on top of enough coal to supply our energy needs far, far into the future, but TLPTB do not want us using it. We are also sitting on top of vast reserves of Natgas, but they have dis-incentivized the exploration/production of those reserves.

It is almost like they want us to freeze and starve, isn’t it?