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Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry
December 2005

Vol. 10, No. 51 Week of December 18, 2005

Natural gas hits all-time high at $15.78

Natural-gas prices surged to an all-time high Dec. 13, as cold weather in the United States and ongoing disrupted production in the Gulf of Mexico caused traders to worry that supplies of home-heating fuels will be tight this winter.

Nymex natural gas rose to an all-time record of $15.78 per thousand cubic feet Dec. 13 before easing back to $15.38 in afternoon trading, up 53.9 cents from the Dec. 12 settlement price.

“The last thing consumers needed to have happen is a cold snap early in the season,” said John Kilduff, analyst at Fimat USA, noting that temperatures have been well below normal in many parts of the country. “With a quarter of natural gas off-line in the Gulf, it’s just stoking the winter supply fears.”

December has been colder than usual so far, and many forecasters are saying below-average temperatures will persist throughout the winter.

Natural gas is most commonly used to heat homes in the Midwestern states, while heating oil is most commonly used in the Northeast.

Kilduff predicted that the price of natural gas could rise as high as $20 per thousand cubic feet by the middle of January.

According to Francisco Blanch, senior energy analyst at Merrill Lynch, natural gas prices are trading above heating oil prices on a calorie-value equivalence basis, a rare occurrence over the past 15 years.

Nymex heating oil gained 6 cents to $1.8325 a gallon Dec. 13.

Crude-oil prices held above $61 a barrel, after the International Energy Agency predicted that global oil demand growth will recover next year. Oil prices also were supported by OPEC’s decision Dec. 12 to keep its production steady at record levels for now but to meet next month to consider reducing output.

—The Associated Press





Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistrubuted.

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