US Natgas Prices Rise from 10-Week Low
2026-01-07 16:49
By
Agna Gabriel
1 min. read
US natural gas futures jumped to $3.50/MMBtu, rebounding from a 10-week low of $3.35 on January 6, as output declined and forecasts pointed to cooler weather and higher heating demand than previously expected.
Average production in the Lower 48 states fell to 109.0 bcfd in early January, down from December’s record of 109.7 bcfd, with daily output dropping toward a three-week low of 108.1 bcfd due to declines in Arkansas and Texas.
Despite slightly cooler projections, weather through January 22 is expected to remain mostly warmer than normal, keeping residential and commercial gas demand below typical levels for this season.
Meanwhile, flows to the eight major US LNG export plants rose to 18.6 bcfd, surpassing December’s record of 18.5 bcfd.
Global prices have eased to multi-month lows amid hopes that progress in Ukraine peace talks could lift sanctions on Russia, potentially boosting future gas exports from the world’s second-largest producer.