Permian Basin natural gas outflows grew week-on-week, even as cash prices declined. Nevertheless, some disruptions to gas outflows occurred on Permian Highway and possibly on Whistler Pipeline. Permian Highway reported maintenance reducing pipeline capacity by about 0.25 Bcf/d on March 6. Whistler is an intrastate pipeline that does not report maintenance or outages publicly, but it is possible that an operational disruption caused a drop in flows between March 5 and March 8. Although production in the Permian Basin was up week-on-week, it is likely that a small amount of production had to be curtailed during the outages.

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Comments

In its Natural Gas Weekly Update, the EIA attributed most of this priciing change to flow restrictions due to maintenance on El Paso, while your insight focuses on flows to the SE. Do you disagree with the EIA's analysis?

In reply to by Ian MacLean

El Paso has been conducting maintenance off and on for a while, outflows to the west on the Tuesday where prices went negative do not look especially low in the data compared to where they have been. It’s possible that it was a contributing factor on prices, but it seems much more likely that the outages on heading east caused the price disruption.