The Energy Information Administration or EIA stated in a latest update yesterday that After a relatively warm start to the 2024–25 winter heating season (November–March), colder-than-normal temperatures across much of the United States in January and February resulted in increased consumption of natural gas and more withdrawals from U.S. natural gas storage than normal. By the end of March, the least amount of natural gas was held in U.S. underground storage in the Lower 48 states since 2022, with inventories 4% lower than the previous five-year average for that time of year, according to our Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report.
EIA noted that in January and February, the colder-than-normal temperatures across the country led to increased natural gas consumption in the residential, commercial, and electric power sectors. Consumption in the combined residential and commercial sectors in January and February averaged 97 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d), 16% more compared with the same period in 2024. A cold snap in the second half of January resulted in the fourth-largest reported weekly withdrawal from storage at 321 Bcf for the week ending January 24. Natural gas withdrawals in January and February combined totaled nearly 1,650 Bcf, or 33% more than the five-year (2020–24) average for those months.