US Natural Gas Stocks Fall Last Week: EIA

2026-02-26 15:32 By Agna Gabriel 1 min. read

US energy firms withdrew 52 billion cubic feet of natural gas from storage in the week ended February 20, 2026, slightly above expectations for a 36 bcf draw.

That figure compares with a draw of 252 bcf during the same week a year ago and a five-year average decline of 168 bcf for this time of year.

Total stockpiles dropped to 2.018 trillion cubic feet, leaving inventories 7.5% above year ago levels and 0.3% under the five year average.

The latest decline follows a 144 bcf withdrawal in the previous week.



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US Natural Gas Stocks Fall Last Week: EIA
US energy firms withdrew 52 billion cubic feet of natural gas from storage in the week ended February 20, 2026, slightly above expectations for a 36 bcf draw. That figure compares with a draw of 252 bcf during the same week a year ago and a five-year average decline of 168 bcf for this time of year. Total stockpiles dropped to 2.018 trillion cubic feet, leaving inventories 7.5% above year ago levels and 0.3% under the five year average. The latest decline follows a 144 bcf withdrawal in the previous week.
2026-02-26
US Natural Gas Stocks Fall Last Week
US energy firms withdrew 144 billion cubic feet of natural gas from storage in the week ended February 13, 2026, slightly above expectations for a 146 bcf draw. That figure compares with a draw of 182 bcf during the same week a year ago and a five-year average decline of 151 bcf for this time of year. Total stockpiles dropped to 2.070 trillion cubic feet, leaving inventories 2.8% below year ago levels and 5.6% under the five year average. The latest decline follows a 249 bcf withdrawal in the previous week as a lingering Arctic blast continued to freeze much of the country.
2026-02-19
US Natural Gas Stocks Fall Less than Expected
US energy firms withdrew 249 billion cubic feet of natural gas from storage in the week ended February 6, 2026, slightly below expectations for a 257 bcf draw, as extreme cold continued to drive strong heating demand. The withdrawal was far larger than the 111 bcf draw in the same week a year ago and well above the five year average decline of 146 bcf. Total stockpiles dropped to 2.214 trillion cubic feet, leaving inventories 4.2% below year ago levels and 5.5% under the five year average. The latest decline follows a record 360 bcf withdrawal in the previous week as an Arctic blast swept across much of the United States.
2026-02-12