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Gas delivered into Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America’s (NGPL) TexOk Receipt and Delivery Zone. This zone includes portions of NGPL’s mainline (Gulf Coast aka G.C.) and A/G lines. The Gulf Coast segment starts at the Texas/Louisiana border in Jefferson County, TX, moves west to Station 302 in Montgomery County, TX, then veers northeast to the Texas/Arkansas border in Cass County, TX. It includes receipts in Angelina, Case, Cass, Harrison, Jefferson, Lamar, Liberty, Marion, Montgomery, Nacogdoches, Panola, Polk, Rusk and San Jacinto counties in Texas. The A/G points included in this index start in Cass County, TX, and run through Lamar County, TX, as well as through Atoka, Bryan, Carter, Johnston, Latimer and Pittsburg counties in Oklahoma. NGI’s NGPL TexOk index does not include the Oklahoma portion of NGPL that lies within the Midcontinent Receipt and Delivery Zone. Furthermore, NGI’s index includes the TexOk Zone - G.C. Pooling Point, but excludes the TexOk Zone A/G Pooling Point.
Natural gas prices at key hubs near the Gulf Coast traded mostly sideways during the first day of bidweek trading on Tuesday. Production moved lower and storage surpluses narrowed, but forecasts pointed to a powerful hurricane impacting the region this week.
October Nymex natural gas futures fluctuated between gains and losses Tuesday before turning lower as profit taking, hurricane risks and middling demand choked off some of the rocket fuel powering the previous three days’ nearly 33.0-cent run higher.
October Nymex natural gas futures floated from gains to losses during Tuesday afternoon trading. The market was caught between prospects of significant demand destruction and production shut-ins as Tropical Storm Helene formed over the Caribbean. Cash prices were mixed by varied demand.
Nearly a dozen market participants announced a series of deals at Gastech 2024 in Houston last week, landing more than 5 million metric tons/year (mmty) of global LNG export and import capacity as supplies are forecast to grow through the end of the decade.
The October natural gas futures contract flew higher on Monday, building on the prior week’s rally and remaining comfortably above a key technical threshold. It settled at $2.613/MMBtu, up 17.9 cents day/day. This followed back-to-back gains to close out last week.