Guessing Natural Gas Storage This Summer Couldn’t Be Harder

 | Jun 02, 2022 04:02AM ET

What will this summer bring in terms of natural gas fills?

With US gas storage persistently below five-year averages from either lower-than-expected production, inclement weather, or Europe’s reliance on American LNG—or all three put together—hazarding a guess on how inventories progress for this season couldn’t get any harder.

Two schools of thought are emerging so far on this.

One, advocated by London-based consultancy Energy Aspects, is that with the heat building, particularly, in the southern United States, the market may have already seen its peak injection for the season at 89 billion cubic feet (bcf). If that proves to be the case, it would mark the first summer without a triple-digit build in six years.

This idea, first appearing on the naturalgasintel.com site, argues that rising exports amid growing summer demand in Asia and an ongoing urgency to replace Russian gas supply in Europe mean the US market has few levers to pull to refill stocks. 

Energy Aspects said the New York Henry Hub’s summer strip for gas futures is failing to provide injection incentives. Case in point: The prompt June gas contract rallying to trade above October at expiration and nearby July now commanding a premium as well in the days since moving to the front of the curve.