At this point, it has stopped being a story about how transient higher energy prices might be and instead become a story of how high could they go as well as how long the higher prices could last. With sentiment easing in the US because of an expected milder October, we also have the headline of the restart of Cove Point LNG, which should add to natural gas demand. The EIA, in the chart below, shows US prices peaking through the end of the year before falling again in early 2022. There remains an expectation that the rest of the world will be short of LNG and so we will either see the US natural gas competitive advantage remain strong, or the US LNG facilities will stretch their underutilized nameplate capacity and this could be supportive of higher US natural gas prices. New LNG capacity does not hit until late 2022 and how much is exported until them will be a function of the throughput of the existing terminals – which today look like they were very prudent investments.
Regardless, the projections of higher winter utility bills in the US as shown in the exhibit below are most likely correct, but US consumers should take some relative solace in the knowledge that it will be much worse in other parts of the World unless governments pick up the costs. Of course, we will all be able to afford the higher bills because apparently there won't be much to buy for the holiday season this year! See the "Other Industry & Downstream" section in today's daily and read our Sunday piece "Deck The Halls With Less Than Last Year..." for more on this.
Source: EIA- Today In Energy, October 2021
Air Products is betting on the US retaining its natural gas pricing edge with its announced hydrogen investment today, but the company is doing a good, albeit expensive, job of hedging its hydrogen bets with the projects in Saudi Arabia and Canada. For more on Air Products see today's daily report.