The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) revised lower its outlook for end-of-winter gas inventories today because of demand-boosting cold weather in November.
US gas stockpiles should drop by 31 March 2015 to 1.431 Tcf (41bn m³), or 14pc below the five-year-average level and 8pc lower than the EIA's end-of-season estimate in November, according to the agency's monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook.
Gas inventories, which can ease concerns about spikes in demand or supply shortfalls, have been in the spotlight this year after last winter's unusually cold weather left stockpiles at their lowest in more than a decade. Stocks have increased at a record pace this year thanks to rising production and mild summer weather, but they remain below some historical measures.
Inventories in the week ended 28 November dropped to 3.41 Tcf — 6.2pc lower than a year earlier and 9.8pc below the five-year average for the week. The EIA reported a 162 Bcf draw during the third week of November, tying a record for the largest draw during that month set in 2013.
US heating demand in November was an estimated 18pc higher than the 10-year average for the month, the EIA said.
The cold snap last month boosted spot prices at Transcontinental Gas pipeline zone 6 in New York to a high above $9/mmBtu. Prices at Algonquin Citygates, which serves Boston Massachusetts, peaked in November at $10.75/mmBtu.
In addition, the EIA said it expects natural gas consumption this year to average 73.9 Bcf/d, up by 3.2pc from 2013 and an increase of 1pc from the agency's November outlook, because of last month's cold weather.
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