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U.S. Gas Prices Soar As Models Suggest Return Of Winter

Natural gas futures bounced off 18-month lows during the holiday session period as the latest runs of long-term weather models suggest winter might not be over for the Lower 48. 

US NatGas futures for February delivery moved up 21 cents to $3.63 per million British thermal units. The price is now trading above the 76.4% Fibonacci retracement level of the main drop from the high of $10 in August 2022 and the low of $1.43 in June 2020. 

The price of NatGas tumbled to an 18-month low last week as mild weather boosted injections into storage facilities by slashing demand. Last week, the Energy Information Administration announced a rare rise in inventories of 11 billion cubic feet in stocks.

However, as we've pointed out in recent weeks and even days, first in "US NatGas Prices Slide To 18-Month Low On Warm Spell; Some Models Forecast Cold Blast In Weeks" and "California Pounding Continues, But Upcoming Large-Scale Weather Pattern Change On The Way," as well as "Siberia Records Minus-80 Degrees As Talk Of Polar Vortex Grows," long term weather models are showing the increasing possibility for colder weather. 

The latest run of the Global Forecast System (GFS) shows the possibility of the return of winter by the end of the month. 

Both GFS and European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) models for the Lower 48 show the possibility of a cold spell -- when both long-term models suggest colder weather, the likelihood increases. 

More mainstream meteorologists, such as Ryan Maue, are now pointing out that a wicked cold spell might be headed for the Lower 48. 

"Winter coming back," tweeted Weather forecaster Joe Bastardi. 

NatGasWeather said cold returns around Jan. 26-30 and might last through the first week of Feb. 

Winter isn't over yet. 

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Comments

  • George Doolittle - 16th Jan 2023 at 11:05pm:
    Production of electricity from wind in Texas now outpaces that from natural gas plus now seemingly insignificant amounts of solar power plus Tesla PowerWall etc and still no even minor wind farms in the entire USA Southeast excepting North Carolina so hard to look at industrial demand for putting a bid in natural gas prices at the moment.

    Dirt cheap relative to diesel fuel quite suddenly tho as is in theory methanol.
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