Winter is doing what winter does best—eating through natural gas inventories at a brisk pace. As Week 52 wraps up, the market is dealing with sustained cold-weather pressure that's driving storage withdrawals well above normal levels and sending prices into territory that would make historical charts blush.
The headline number for Week 51 (ending December 19) tells the story: a forecast withdrawal of 158 BCF from underground storage facilities. That's not just a big number in absolute terms—it's 35 BCF deeper than the five-year average for this time of year. The result? Total inventories have dropped to 3,420 BCF, sitting 125 BCF below where we were in 2024 and 70 BCF under the five-year average. When inventories fall below historical benchmarks this early in withdrawal season, traders start doing nervous math about whether there's enough gas to make it through March.
Price Volatility Hits Historical Extremes
If you've been watching the F26 contract heading into expiration, you've witnessed quite a show. The final days before contract expiration brought the kind of volatility that makes for interesting times—perhaps too interesting. Current prices have blown through the upper limit of the historical interquartile range measured 10 days before expiration, pushing above the 75th percentile and flirting with historical highs.
This kind of price action typically signals one of two things: either there's intense buyer pressure reflecting genuine supply concerns, or market expectations have shifted dramatically. The less comfortable interpretation? Prices that spike this far above historical norms also face elevated risk of snapping back down toward those norms. When you're trading at levels that exceed three-quarters of historical observations, the path of least resistance isn't always up.
Forward Curve Shows Split Personality
Looking at the forward curve reveals an interesting divergence. For longer-dated contracts, the 2025 curve shape looks remarkably consistent with the 2023-2024 ranges. That suggests the market isn't pricing in any fundamental structural changes to supply and demand over the medium term. But zoom in on the nearby contracts, particularly that F26 expiration, and you see significant volatility that stands apart from the orderly long-term picture.
This split personality—calm in the distance, chaos up close—reflects the market trying to price two different questions simultaneously. Long-term, production capacity and demand trends look stable. Short-term, there's a very immediate question of whether there's enough gas in the right places to meet heating demand during cold snaps. Those are different problems requiring different risk premiums.
Weather Patterns Drive Demand Dynamics
The weather story has been all over the map recently. HDD+CDD indicators (that's heating degree days plus cooling degree days, which measure how much energy is needed to keep buildings comfortable) surged to 30-year highs before moderating. As of late December, these indicators sit at the lower end of the historical range, and meteorological models suggest the next two weeks should bring weather within average to moderately warm ranges compared to the 30-year climate norm.
That sounds like it should relieve pressure, and to some extent it does. But here's the thing about natural gas demand: even "average" winter weather requires substantial heating, and we're drawing down storage much faster than average. The comparison point matters less than the absolute consumption rate when you're already behind on inventories.
Supply-Demand Balance Shifts After Abnormal Growth
The daily supply-demand difference tells another chapter of this story. After a period of abnormal growth, the gap between supply and demand as of December 24 has fallen below the lower interquartile range for the 2014-2024 period. Production has remained relatively stable, which means the shift is happening on the demand side—consumption is running hot enough that even steady production can't keep the tank full.
Put another way: we're burning through more gas than we're pulling out of the ground, which is exactly what storage is for. But when this happens earlier and more aggressively than usual, storage levels drop faster, and everyone starts wondering how many more cold weeks the system can handle before things get tight.
Storage Sufficiency Drops to 30-Day Buffer
One useful way to think about storage levels is asking: if production stopped entirely, how long would current inventories last at current consumption rates? As of December 24, the answer is approximately 30 days. That's one day higher than where we stood in 2024 and two days lower than the historical average—essentially right around typical levels.
This metric staying near average might sound reassuring, but remember it's measuring a hypothetical scenario. The real concern isn't whether production stops (it won't), but whether production plus storage withdrawals can meet demand during extended cold periods. A 30-day cushion sounds comfortable until you hit a two-week deep freeze that accelerates withdrawal rates.
European Storage Adds Pressure to Global Markets
Across the Atlantic, European gas storage continues its downward trajectory, hitting 66.1% on December 24, down 2.7% for the week. That level sits 9.8% below the historical average and 9.2% lower than last year. While Europe's storage situation doesn't directly affect US natural gas prices (we're not shipping much LNG to Europe from domestic production), it does affect global energy markets and LNG demand dynamics.
The European picture looks particularly concerning in certain countries. Croatia sits at just 41.7% capacity, Latvia at 50%, Denmark at 52.9%, and the Netherlands at 53.5%. Meanwhile, Sweden somehow has 102% storage (presumably counting cushion gas or using creative accounting), with Portugal at 93.5%, Poland at 85.7%, Romania at 78.8%, and Italy at 76.5%. This dispersion matters because it affects regional pricing and transport bottlenecks within Europe, which in turn influences how aggressively European buyers bid for LNG cargoes that might otherwise go elsewhere.
Power Generation Mix Remains Stable
In the US electricity generation mix, natural gas maintained its dominant position at 35.9% of total generation as of December 24, though that represents a 3% decline from the previous week. Gas generation is sitting comfortably in the middle of its historical range—neither unusually high nor low. This stability matters because power generation represents a huge chunk of gas demand, and shifts in the generation mix can amplify or dampen storage withdrawal rates.
Nuclear generation picked up the slack, increasing 2.8% to reach 20.8% of the total, also in the middle range. Coal generation dropped 2.5% to sit near its five-year low of 16.8%—coal's long decline continues unabated. Wind generation had a volatile week, spiking as high as 17.5% before settling at 13.9%, while solar accounted for 3.5% of generation. The renewable volatility highlights why gas remains the crucial swing fuel: when wind dies down or clouds roll in, gas-fired plants ramp up to fill the gap.
What It All Means for the Market
Pulling all these threads together: we're in a natural gas market experiencing legitimate winter demand pressure, with storage levels below normal and withdrawal rates above average. Prices have spiked to reflect this reality, perhaps overshooting a bit in the process. Production remains stable, which is good, but it's not enough to offset elevated consumption, which is less good.
The forward curve suggests the market thinks this is a near-term phenomenon rather than a structural shift, but near-term problems can still cause significant price moves and genuine supply concerns in specific regions or during weather extremes. With European storage also running below normal, global gas markets face tighter conditions than usual, which could affect LNG flows and keep some support under US prices even as domestic weather moderates.
For the next several weeks, weather forecasts will drive price action more than usual. Every updated temperature outlook will get scrutinized for its implications on heating demand and storage withdrawal rates. If we get back-to-back cold weeks, those withdrawal numbers could accelerate further, pushing inventories even deeper below historical averages. If we get a sustained warm spell, the market might exhale and prices could retreat from their current elevated levels.
Either way, we're past the point where this winter will be remembered as boring. Storage levels don't lie, and right now they're telling us this has been a colder, more demanding heating season than recent years. Whether that continues depends entirely on what the weather does next—which is another way of saying nobody really knows, but everyone will pretend they do until the next forecast comes out.




