The Northeast saw Res/Comm demand continue its decline over the week ended May 6, but Power demand picked up as the market continues to transition from heating season to cooling season. Power demand averaged 7 Bcf/d last week and was higher than Res/Comm demand each day. Demand was lowest over the weekend, which was also when Power sector demand was lowest. Overall Northeast demand averaged 15.6 Bcf/d, up 0.2 Bcf/d from the previous week. Res/Comm demand fell by 0.9 Bcf/d but Industrial demand grew by 0.4 Bcf/d and Power demand increased by 0.6 Bcf/d.
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Northeast Gas Demand Dwindles on Lower Power Demand, LNG Maintenance
Turn the Page - Producer Restraint, Tighter Balances Disrupt Appalachian Gas Market Trends
Before the bullish winter of 2021-22, it appeared the Northeast natural gas market was headed for familiar territory: worsening seasonal takeaway constraints and deeper, constraint-driven price discounts starting as early as this spring. Instead, the market went in the other direction the past few months. Takeaway utilization out of Appalachia has been lower year-on-year and, for the most part, Appalachian supply basin prices have followed Henry Hub higher even as that benchmark rocketed to 14-year highs. That’s not to say that constraints out of the Northeast aren’t on the horizon. But the market is now poised to escape the worst of it this year, despite the completion of the last major takeaway pipeline project in the region, Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP), being pushed out another year or longer, if it crosses the finish line at all. In today’s RBN blog, we provide an update on regional fundamentals and what recent trends mean for gas production growth and pricing in the region.