Weekly Energy Industry Summary

Commodity Fundamentals

Week of September 15, 2025

By The Numbers:

  • NG '25 prompt-month NYMEX natural gas settled at $3.04/MMbtu, up $.10/MMbtu on Monday, September 15.
  • NG '25 prompt-month NYMEX natural gas settled at $3.09/MMbtu, one week ago.
  • Prompt-month crude oil settled at $63.30/bbl., up $.61/bbl., on Monday, September 15.
  • Prompt-month crude oil settled at $62.26/bbl., one week ago.

Natural Gas Fundamentals - Neutral/Bearish

  • Generally, fundamental supply/demand drivers are neutral to bearish for the coming week.
  • Weather is largely seasonal, albeit a bit above normal in the Midwest, but the average temperatures are falling with the advent of fall. The threshold of the low demand "shoulder" period is here.
  • Production is strong.  Month-to-date gas production averaged 106.7 Bcf/d versus 100.8 Bcf per day for the same period last year.
  • Year-to-date production averaged 105.3 Bcf/d versus 101.6 Bcf/d for the same period last year.
  • Power generation demand is declining along with decreasing temperatures.  Month-to-date demand for natural-gas-fired power generation averaged 39.9 Bcf/d versus 41.1 Bcf/d for the same period last year.
  • Residential and commercial demand, month-to-date, averaged 22.1 Bcf/d versus 22 Bcf/d for the same period last year.
  • LNG exports year-to-date averaged 15.3 Bcf/d versus 12.8 Bcf/d for the same period last year.
  • Exports to Mexico are flat year-over-year.
  • Storage inventories are on a trajectory to be at or near 4 trillion cubic feet by the end of October, or, nearly full.

Crude Oil - Neutral

  • NYMEX (WTI) prompt-month-crude settled at $63.30/bbl., up $.61, on Monday, September 15.
  • The EU has delayed Russia sanctions to coordinate action with the G7.
  • A sanctioned oil tanker has unloaded its cargo at the Indian port of Mundra despite the port owner's order not to allow sanctioned tankers to dock there.
  • California passes bill to boost oil production amid refinery shutdowns in the state.
  • China has been amassing crude oil in storage.
  • The International Energy Agency, which has repeatedly predicted that global oil demand growth will peak before 2030, has drafted a report admitting both oil and gas demand are set to continue growing for decades, Bloomberg reports.

Economy - Neutral

  • The U.S. added 22,000 jobs in August, fewer than expected.
  • The unemployment rate was 4.3%.
  • Jobs were gained in healthcare and lost in manufacturing and construction.
  • Some Fed watchers say that the jobs results increase the chance for rate cuts as early as this month.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics concludes the U.S. added 911,000 fewer jobs in the year ending in March than previously estimated; the labor market may well have had less momentum coming into 2025 than previously thought.
  • Equities markets remain elevated.
  • Crude oil and gasoline prices are relatively low compared to the prior three/four years.
  • The home building market is weak.

Weather - Neutral

  • The outlook for the second half of August has flexed down sharply with below-to-well-below normal temperatures prevailing through the eastern half of the country and staying lower-for-longer.
  • The West will be hot.
  • The tropics are ramping up, and this is generally bearish of natural gas.

Weekly Natural Gas Report:

 
  • Inventories of natural gas in underground storage for the week ending August 29 are 3,272 Bcf; an injection of 55 Bcf was reported for the week ending August 29.
  • Gas inventories are 173 Bcf above the five-year average and 73 Bcf less than the same time last year. 
Values reflect week ending Sept. 12, 2025
Prices reflect week ending Sept. 12, 2025

Weekly Power Report:

Mid-Atlantic Electric Summary

  • The Mid-Atlantic Region’s forward power prices were unchanged over the past week as steady demand and more than adequate supply heading into the shoulder months, has the market consolidating of late.  A storm moving up the Mid-Atlantic coast will bring cooler conditions to this region, followed by a temperature spike on Friday ahead of a weekend cold front. The highest temperature anomalies remain centered over the mid-continent and extend toward the upper West. The 11 to 15-day outlook brings a generally warmer-than-normal pattern, with the highest anomalies in the North.  Power futures were unchanged over the past week and were 1% higher over the past month, for the 2026-2030 terms.  The month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price average in West Hub for September currently is $33.18/MWh, which is -7% lower than last month and 7% higher than a year ago.
  • Federal Court Rules in Favor of Transmission Line - The U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals issued a 65-page ruling in a lawsuit filed by Transource Pennsylvania LLC against the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) affirming a lower court decision that the PUC had no authority to disregard a finding of need for a PJM-approved transmission line when determining whether to grant a certificate of public necessity and convenience (CPCN) for the line.  The case stems from a project that was originally approved by the FERC in 2017 based on a finding by PJM that the transmission line was needed to reduce energy congestion and prices in Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia and D.C. and that the benefits of the project outweigh the costs.  Before the PUC, Transource pointed to savings for energy customers in the southern part of the grid of more than $840 million over 15 years, but the PUC found that those savings meant that electricity costs for Pennsylvanians would increase by up to $812 million over the same period.  The PUC therefore rejected Transource’s request for a CPCN to build the project.  Transource took the PUC to federal court and prevailed in 2023, leading to an appeal by the PUC to the Third Circuit.  On appeal, the Third Circuit panel unanimously found that the PUC violated the supremacy clause of the U.S. Constitution when it found that Transource had failed to demonstrate a need for the transmission line given that PJM already had found that the line was needed as part of the 9A Project pursuant to a FERC-approved tariff.  In its order, the appellate court concluded that the PUC’s action “poses an obstacle to accomplishing federal objectives” and was therefore preempted. The appellate judge acknowledged that the PUC is not required to rubber-stamp any PJM approved project application but stated that the PUC cannot disregard PJM’s finding of need under a federal tariff.  The PUC is currently weighing whether it will appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Great Lakes Electric Summary

  • The Great Lakes Region’s forward power prices were unchanged over the past week as steady demand and more than adequate supply heading into the shoulder months, has the market consolidating of late.  A storm moving up the Mid-Atlantic coast will bring cooler conditions to this region, followed by a temperature spike on Friday ahead of a weekend cold front. The highest temperature anomalies remain centered over the mid-continent and extend toward the upper West. The 11 to 15-day outlook brings a generally warmer-than-normal pattern, with the highest anomalies in the North.  Power futures were unchanged over the past week and 3% higher over the past month, for the 2026-2030 terms.  The month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price average in COMED for September is $29.68/MWh, which is -20% lower than last month, while in AdHub the price is $32.35/MWh or -11% lower than last month.  In Michigan the month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price average is currently $32.68/MWh or -23% lower than August, while Ameren’s current price average is $31.95/MWh, which is -20% lower than last month.
  • Governors Call for Transparency and State Representation in PJM Board Selection - On 9/10, seven governors from the states of PA, DE, IL, MD, NJ, TN and VA sent a letter to the PJM Board of Managers expressing disappointment that their recommended candidates, former FERC Chairman Mark Christie and former FERC Commissioner Allison Clements, were not nominated to fill two vacant seats on the Board. While the governors acknowledged the strong qualifications of the nominees advanced by the Nominating Committee, Dr. Robert (Bob) Ethier and Dr. Le Xie, they stated that neither represent the perspectives or priorities of the PJM states. The governors argued that the decision to disregard their recommendations signals a troubling trend of diminishing state influence in PJM governance.  The 2024/2025 PJM Nominating Committee reviewed all candidates and, in accordance with the Operating Agreement, advanced Dr. Ethier and Dr. Xie for consideration. PJM members will vote on the nominees at the 9/25 Members Committee meeting. Governance issues will be discussed further on 9/22 at the multi-state technical conference in Philadelphia billed as a Summit on the State of PJM Interconnection.

Northeast Energy Summary

  • On September 2, Eversource Energy filed petitions (for Eversource Gas of Massachusetts and NSTAR) with the Department of Public Utilities to approve a 10-year contract with Enbridge to provide firm delivery of natural gas from their Algonquin Gas Transmission pipeline.  Enbridge recently announced a final investment decision to expand the G-lateral pipeline in southeast Massachusetts and Rhode Island to deliver an additional 75 million cubic feet of natural gas per day starting in 2029.  Now, Eversource has entered into an agreement with Enbridge to buy around 40% of the expanded capacity to serve customers in its NSTAR Gas and former Columbia Gas territories.
  • On September 5, the Connecticut Public Utilities Regulatory Authority (PURA) opened Docket 12-06-02RE04 and issued a notice of request for written comments.  Docket 12-06-02RE04 was opened to implement SB4 which passed earlier this year.  SB4, among other things, requires PURA and the electric distribution companies to revise the standard service procurement plan, examining modifications to the frequency of competitive solicitations and develop the ability to procure 25% of the standard service load through “dynamic market purchases,” which include spot market purchases “based on the active monitoring of day-ahead and real-time markets.”  These provisions are an attempt to address energy affordability, which became a leading issue in states across New England over the last year with rising energy costs.  Now, Connecticut is the latest state in New England to consider having utilities self-supply part of their standard offer service load. PURA’s notice requests feedback for several specific issues on the proposed standard service procurement amendments, including target levels of dynamic market purchases, interaction with current tranche sizes, development of proxy prices, interaction with nuclear power purchase agreements, securing environmental attributes for dynamic purchases, mitigating the risk for dynamic purchases, impact of ISO-NE capacity market reforms on dynamic market purchases, mitigating risk of customer migration, utilizing varying durations of standard service contracts, and purchasing separate fixed price energy supply and capacity contracts.
  • Recently, New York Governor Hochul announced more than $11 million was awarded to five clean hydrogen research and development (R&D) projects.  The projects were selected through the Advanced Fuels and Thermal Energy Research Program, administered by NYSERDA.  According to NYSERDA, the awarded projects will demonstrate new technology designs, cost reductions associated with hydrogen storage and distribution, evaluate large-scale clean hydrogen storage opportunities, and deploy zero-emission hydrogen-powered transportation.  The awarded projects include:
    • GTI Energy - Awarded $220,000 to evaluate NY geological hydrogen storage potential;
    • National Grid Ventures - Awarded $2 million to install the first commercially deployed 100% hydrogen-fueled linear generator at National Grid’s Northport Power Plant in Fort Salonga;
    • Plug Power Inc. - Awarded $2 million to partner with Verne to co-develop new hydrogen distribution trailers with cryo-compressed storage technologies;
    • Stony Brook University - Awarded over $4.9 million for a low-pressure, ambient temperature hydrogen storage system at Northwell Health Hospital; and
    • SWITCH Maritime LLC - Awarded $2 million to develop and demonstrate NY’s first hydrogen fuel cell-electric ferry

ERCOT Energy Summary

CAISO, Desert Southwest and Pacific Northwest Energy Summary

  • Above normal temperatures will be the theme for the West heading into the back half of the month. Low to mid-90s are forecast across inland California early this week with low to mid-80s expected in the SoCal coastal cities. The above normal weather pattern is forecast to persist across the West into this weekend and early next week before the models suggest a more seasonable pattern builds in late month. Tropical Storm Mario is currently in the Eastern Pacific and is expected to track along the Baja Peninsula in the coming days. While it looks like Mario will dissipate by mid-week, some remnant moisture is on track to land in SoCal on Thursday bringing rain – yes, rain – to the region in September. The temperature forecast this day is wide, somewhere in the 80s for the LA Basin, depending upon how much rain falls. But the near notion of rain before November is an anomaly.
  • Abundant sunshine and hydro flow this spring took the pressure off the state’s gas system, and it entered the summer period with robust stocks. As the end of the cooling demand season nears, the gas system remains well positioned for the upcoming heating demand season. SoCalGas ended last week with an aggregated storage level over that of the same time in 2024 and it is roughly 2 Bcf below the peak storage level of 106 Bcf posted last year in early November. As temperatures glide down for the year, the CAISO grid will see springtime conditions re-emerge as solar swamps the grid midday and the need for thermal generation decreases. In recent days the spread between NP15 and SP15 Day Ahead index settlements has widened as moderating loads and solar overproduction brings negative prices back into the mix. Standing up our standard warning for those with interests in the West during Santa Ana season – the late summer/into fall potential for Santa Ana’s to percolate and royally ruin your day is top of mind for the next month and a half.
  • California lawmakers closed out the legislative year with one of the most sweeping overhauls of the state’s energy and climate policies in decades – a package that could give the governor a presidential debate-stage talking point on rising energy costs as his party shifts its focus to affordability. The six-bill deal, passed Saturday after legislators put their session into extra innings because of last-minute dealmaking, was sold as a way to ease gas prices and soaring electricity bills while preserving the state’s signature climate programs. The most contentious and consequential element of the lawmaking six pack was the reauthorization of the state’s cap & trade system. Weeks of tense negotiations culminated in a deal that extends the carbon pricing and credit trading program, which has been central to California’s climate strategy for nearly a decade. The renewed program, now renamed as “cap & invest” – aims to provide regulatory certainty for businesses and utilities, and has been extended to 2045. The extension, hammered out in backroom talks, was one of the most divisive elements of the package. The carbon-trading program, launched in 2013, is California’s way of putting a price tag on greenhouse gas emissions and penalizing those responsible for emitting. The program sets a strict cap on emissions for polluters and hands out a limited supply of permits companies can sell to other polluters if they cut enough emissions. The final agreement on the program preserved rules that let oil companies avoid paying the full cost of their emissions while leaving untouched a cap on carbon prices. This setup shields polluters while leaving consumers potentially exposed to higher gas prices.

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