| Low U.S. injections reflect already high natural gas storage inventories |
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09/08/2012 00:14 (282 Day 15:32 minutes ago) | |||||
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The FINANCIAL -- The increase in U.S. working natural gas inventories nearly half way through the 2012 injection season—the period from April through October when most natural gas is stored underground to help meet heating demand during the upcoming winter—was the lowest in 12 years.
The slow start to the injection season reflects record-high inventories at the end of this winter, leaving less space to be filled, and a large increase in natural gas use by the U.S. electric sector for power generation. EIA estimates that, by November, working natural gas inventories will hit a record high, exceeding 3,900 billion cubic feet (Bcf). U.S. dry natural gas production was up almost 7% from January through May of 2012 compared to the same period in 2011, so natural gas injections have not shifted lower due to a downturn in domestic natural gas production.
As EIA reporetyd, two main factors have contributed to the below-average increase in natural gas inventories:
Increased demand from the electric sector, with low-priced natural gas burn totaling about 2,600 Bcf from April through June of 2012, up 27% from just over 2,000 Bcf burned during the same period in 2011. Working gas in underground storage at the end of the 2011-2012 heating season stood at a record high because of above-normal winter temperatures, thus limiting the amount of gas that could be injected this year. Underground storage capacity is now about 75% full, a level not usually reached in recent years until late August or early September.
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