US weekly LNG exports flat, Henry Hub climbs

US LNG exports remained flat in the week ending October 27, while the Henry Hub spot price logged an increase when compared to the week before.

The Energy Information Administration said in its weekly natural gas report that the US has exported 20 LNG shipments between October 21 and October 27.

This compares to 20 LNG cargoes during the prior week.

Also, natural gas deliveries to US LNG export facilities averaged 10.6 Bcf/d, or 0.2 Bcf/d lower than last week.

Six US terminals exported the 20 cargoes during the week under review. The total capacity of LNG vessels carrying these cargoes is 73 Bcf, compared to 74 Bcf in the week before.

Cheniere’s Sabine Pass plant dispatched six cargoes, while its Corpus Christi plant sent four shipments. The Freeport LNG terminal also sent four shipments while Cameron dispatched three cargoes.

The Cove Point LNG export facility sent two cargoes and Elba Island dispatched one.

Henry Hub spot price up this week

This report week, the Henry Hub spot price rose $1.07 from a weekly low of $4.79/MMBtu last Wednesday to a weekly high of $5.86/MMBtu this Wednesday, the agency said.

Natural gas demand rose in the Gulf Coast region as a result of higher natural gas flows into the Midcontinent region.

IHS Markit reports weekly average natural gas demand in southern Louisiana fell by approximately 0.2 Bcf/d week over week, primarily as a result of lower feed gas deliveries to LNG export terminals, which were more than 0.2 Bcf/d lower than last week.

However, feed gas deliveries rose near the end of the week, tightening the regional natural gas market.

Cheniere, operator of the Creole Trail pipeline that delivers natural gas to the Sabine Pass LNG export terminal in Louisiana, reported natural gas deliveries to Sabine Pass rose from 1.0 Bcf/d last Wednesday to as high as 1.6 Bcf/d on Tuesday and close to 1.2 Bcf/d this Wednesday.

LNG prices and TTF rise

Increases in international natural gas prices slowed this report week, EIA said.

Bloomberg Finance reported that swap prices for November LNG cargoes in East Asia rose for the ninth week in a row to a weekly average of $34.05/MMBtu this report week, the highest weekly average on record since January 2020 but less than price increases in previous weeks.

The East Asia price rose 13 cents/MMBtu above last week’s average of $33.92/MMBtu.

At the Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF), day-ahead prices fell this report week to a weekly average of $29.60/MMBtu, down 83 cents/MMBtu from last week’s average of $30.43/MMBtu.

In the same week last year (week ending October 28, 2020), prices in East Asia and at TTF were $6.89/MMBtu and $5.17/MMBtu, respectively, the agency said.

Most Popular

Woodside names Sarah Bairstow as Louisiana LNG head

Australian LNG player Woodside has appointed Sarah Bairstow to lead its Louisiana LNG project.

Cheniere to start site preparation for two more Corpus Christi LNG trains

US LNG exporting giant Cheniere is seeking approval from the US FERC to start site preparation activities for two more midscale trains at its Corpus Christi LNG plant in Texas.

BP, partners ship first Tortue LNG cargo

UK-based energy giant BP and its partners have shipped the first liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargo produced at the Greater Tortue Ahmeyim FLNG project, located offshore Mauritania and Senegal, according to shipping data.

More News Like This

LNG shipping rates continue to decrease

Spot LNG freight shipping rates in both basins continued to decrease this week, while European prices increased compared to last week.

US LNG exports climb to 34 cargoes

US liquefied natural gas (LNG) plants shipped 34 cargoes during the week ending April 16. According to the Energy Information Administration, pipeline deliveries to the LNG terminals increased compared to the prior week.

Venture Global launches Calcasieu Pass LNG commercial ops

US LNG exporter Venture Global LNG has launched commercial operations at its Calcasieu Pass LNG terminal in Louisiana, some 68 months from its final investment decision and 38 months after production start.

India’s GAIL seeks stake in US LNG project

India’s largest gas utility, GAIL, has launched a tender to take equity and buy volumes from a US LNG export project.