Natural Gas: Mixed Smoke Signals From Canada

 | May 25, 2023 17:56

  • With Alberta blazes under control, U.S. gas supply seen steadying, bears say
  • Bulls think wildfire disruptions to Canada gas flows will have lasting U.S. impact
  • Weekly storage build at 108 bcf; gas futures steady at North of mid-$2
  • If ​​natural gas bulls’ base case for Canada is to be believed, the wildfires up North may have already changed the calculus of the U.S. summer build season for the fuel.

    As the heroic efforts of firefighters leave just a handful of blazes still raging in Alberta, what’s being suggested is that the problems caused by the dip in Canadian gas flow to the United States won’t go away even with the full resumption of exports, which could take until July.

    The bull argument is that disruption from the North and other counter-seasonal activity has likely skewed injection plans across a large swath of the country for U.S. gas flowing from the south-central to the Midwest, Northeast, and elsewhere.

    The premise is that this season’s aggressive and systemic LNG facility maintenance prevents storage builds from being much higher than they should be.

    The underwhelming build of 99 billion cubic feet, or bcf, reported by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, or EIA, for the week ended May 12 could be a case in point for this, is what we hear. The forecast of industry analysts for that week had been for an increase of 108 bcf.