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Warmer US Weather Undercuts Natural Gas Rally as Production Surges
Natural gas prices face mounting headwinds as forecasters predict above-normal temperatures across most of the continental US through mid-February, a development that is expected to significantly undercut heating demand. The March NYMEX natural gas contract (NGH26) closed down 0.73% on Tuesday, marking its third consecutive session of decline and posting a 4-week low. This pullback reflects a broader market dynamic where multiple bearish factors are converging to suppress valuations.
Temperature Forecasts Dim Heating Demand Outlook
The Commodity Weather Group’s latest projection indicates warmer-than-normal conditions will blanket the US, excluding coastal regions, over the next two weeks. Milder winter weather typically reduces the demand for natural gas used in heating applications, directly undercutting the price support that cold snaps normally provide. This forecast stands in sharp contrast to late January, when an Arctic cold front swept across the country, triggering freeze-ups that knocked approximately 50 billion cubic feet of production offline—roughly 15% of total US output—and sent prices surging to 3-year highs.
Production Gains Add Pressure to the Market
On the supply side, the Energy Information Administration raised its 2026 dry natural gas production forecast to 109.97 bcf/day from the prior month’s estimate of 108.82 bcf/day, signaling robust output growth that pressures prices from above. Current US gas production is operating near record levels, with active drilling rigs reaching a 2.5-year high last week at 130 units—up five rigs from the prior week. The number of active rigs has climbed steadily from a 4.75-year low of 94 recorded in September 2024, underscoring the industry’s response to market conditions. Lower-48 dry gas production on Tuesday reached 112.8 bcf/day, representing a 6.8% year-over-year increase.
Demand Contraction and Storage Dynamics
Lower-48 gas demand on Tuesday fell to 94.9 bcf/day, down 11.2% year-over-year according to Bloomberg NEF data. LNG export flows to US terminals totaled 19.5 bcf/day, up 2.6% week-over-week. The EIA’s latest weekly report showed natural gas inventories fell by 360 bcf for the week ending January 30—a record draw but smaller than market expectations of 378 bcf. Despite the decline, inventories remain elevated 2.8% above year-ago levels, though they sit 1.1% below the 5-year seasonal average, suggesting relatively balanced supply conditions. European gas storage, by contrast, remains notably tight at just 37% capacity versus the 5-year average of 54% for this period.
Electricity Generation Supports Limited Upside
One bright spot for natural gas demand comes from elevated electricity generation. The Edison Electric Institute reported that US Lower-48 electricity output for the week ending January 31 climbed 21.4% year-over-year to 99,925 GWh, with annual output up 2.39% to 4.3 million GWh. Higher power generation can support gas demand at electric utilities, though current warmth forecasts may limit how much this factor can offset the heating-related headwinds that are undercutting the market.