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Nat-Gas Prices Plunge as Warm Weather Forecasts Dampen Demand

Summary

  • Nat-gas prices fell sharply due to warmer-than-normal weather forecasts
  • US gas production near record high, inventories above 5-year average
  • Electricity output rose, but active nat-gas rigs declined from 2-year peak

On November 18, 2025, natural gas prices fell sharply due to warmer-than-normal weather forecasts for November 22-26 in the eastern half of the United States. This bearish weather outlook has pressured nat-gas prices, which were also weighed down by high US natural gas production and inventories.

The US is currently producing near-record levels of natural gas, with the Energy Information Administration recently raising its 2025 production forecast by 1.0% to 107.67 billion cubic feet per day. This surge in supply has been a key bearish factor for nat-gas prices. Additionally, US natural gas inventories as of November 7 were 4.5% above their 5-year seasonal average, signaling adequate supplies.

However, there were some supportive factors for gas prices. The Edison Electric Institute reported that US electricity output rose 0.12% year-over-year in the week ending November 8, and was up 2.84% over the past 52 weeks. But the number of active US natural gas rigs fell by 3 to 125 rigs in the week ending November 14, down from a 2.25-year high of 128 rigs the prior week.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Prices fell sharply due to warmer-than-normal weather forecasts for the eastern US, which dampened demand for natural gas.
US natural gas production is near record highs, with the EIA recently raising its 2025 production forecast by 1.0% to 107.67 bcf/day.
As of November 7, 2025, US natural gas inventories were 4.5% above their 5-year seasonal average, signaling adequate supplies.

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