Analysts Predict Less NatGas Storage on the Way for End of May
The price of natural gas is, in one sense, complex, with lots of variables depending on where the gas is bought and sold. On the other hand, it can be boiled down to a simple-to-understand formula: Supply and demand. Of course, it is the factors that go into supply and demand that make it so tricky to nail down and predict! Weather and LNG exports are big factors on the demand side. Production and storage are big factors on the supply side. A number of Marcellus/Utica drillers have scaled back on production. In the month of May, according to analysts with S&P, storage levels are "below average" due to more gas being used to keep houses air-conditioned (natgas is used to generate power, leaving less to be stored for next winter).
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