随着供应增长淹没天然气,天然气价格将低于 2 美元

未来更多的液化天然气需求意味着需要增加 ArkLaTex 的产量——这为美国各地的上游投资和基础设施增长带来了重大机遇

贾斯汀·卡尔森 (Justin Carlson) 是科罗拉多州 East Daley Analytics 的联合创始人兼首席商务官。


贾斯汀·卡尔森,东戴利
贾斯汀·卡尔森 (Justin Carlson),东戴利 (East Daley) 首席商务官。 (来源:东戴利分析)

2023 年天然气期货大幅下跌,全年大部分时间跌破 3 美元/MMBtu。虽然暖冬加剧了看跌情绪,但东戴利分析公司认为,更大的问题是供应增长过热。天然气价格目前已明显低于 2 美元,市场可能无法采取太多措施来阻止这种情况发生。

天然气价格下跌迅速,自 2022 年 12 月中旬以来,近月 Henry Hub 合约下跌了 60% 以上。在北极锋线严寒之前,Henry Hub 的交易价格接近 7 美元/MMBtu,但中西部和东北部主要市场的气温一月份气温迅速变暖,有时气候温和,减少了供暖需求。

3 月 6 日,4 月近月期货合约的交易价格为 2.60 美元/MMBtu,而亨利中心地带到 2023 年 6 月的价格水平均低于 3 美元。

天然气的下降由来已久。近 12 个月来,East Daley 一直通过我们的“宏观供需预测”(我们对美国天然气产量、需求以及通过管道和进出口的总体预测)警告客户,由于产量快速增长,导致 2023 年出现不平衡。液化天然气。

我们在 2022 年 2 月发布的首份《宏观:“由于产量增长,从 2023 年 3 月开始,平衡前储存量高于五年平均水平,到 2023 年第四季度超过 4 Tcf。如果市场没有预料到这种趋势,价格可能会急剧反转。”

虽然温和的冬季和需求前景的转变促进了市场情绪,但供应增长的动力将是意想不到的“棺材里的尾巴”,压低价格。

过热的供应增长是 East Daley 于 2022 年 12 月发布的《 2023 年,当时我们强调了 2023 年退出时“无限制”天然气产量增长 5 Bcf/d 的前景退出,以二叠纪盆地和 ArkLaTex 盆地为首。按照这种供应增长速度,库存将迅速增加,并在明年冬季之前超过 4 Tcf 的库存上限。

根据我们最新的宏观预测,即使在最近的市场下跌之后,降价幅度也不够大我们认为需要“对系统进行冲击”以减缓天然气产量增长并迫使生产商堵塞油井并推迟完工。

钻机太多是主要问题。根据East Daley 能源数据工作室的数据,截至 2023 年 2 月 24 日当周,美国水平钻机数量总计 715 个,接近 2022 年 7 月底 724 个水平钻机的最高点,当时 WTI 原油价格接近 100 美元/盎司。桶。

值得注意的是,尽管今年钻机减少,但我们预计产量仍将强劲增长,这意味着我们已经在宏观模型中考虑了 2023 年钻机数量下降的情况,以帮助恢复平衡。我们认为供应增长是不可避免的,因为钻井和开发活动导致新井首次生产之前存在时间滞后。

在二叠纪盆地,要到今年年底,MPLX 的惠斯勒管道(500 MMcf/d)和金德摩根二叠纪高速公路(550 MMcf/d)的扩建计划开始服务时,大部分增长才会实现。如果原油价格没有大幅下跌,我们预计二叠纪盆地不会回落。因此,其他地方的天然气产量必须停止增长,以平衡市场。

在我们最新的月度《宏观供需预测》中,我们提供了两种情景:显示天然气供应问题严重性的不平衡预测和避免2023年供应过剩的“强制平衡”情景。

ArkLaTex盆
图 2:ArkLaTex 盆地。(来源:East Daley,宏观供需预测)

图 2 显示了这些场景如何在 Haynesville (ArkLaTex) 中进行对比,以选择一个盆地。实心区域显示了不平衡的预测,其中钻探活动(主要来自 Aethon、Comstock Resources 和 Southwestern Energy)推动了超过 1.5 Bcf/d 的供应增长。

海恩斯维尔的难题在于,钻井平台已经就位,可以创造这种新的增长。因此,为了降低近期产量以实现市场平衡,我们同比减少了 19 台钻机活动。

我们还在 2023 年底之前建立了 350 个 DUC 的库存,以推迟新生产的开始。自从我们提出这个案例以来,包括康斯托克资源公司和切萨皮克能源公司在内的几家海恩斯维尔生产商已经宣布削减钻机数量,但我们认为迄今为止的这些公告不足以避免供应过剩。如果生产商选择不建造 DUC,则可能需要更大幅度的供应削减(例如关井)来平衡市场。

天然气的故事是一个微妙的故事。从长远来看,液化天然气需求的大幅增长将需要提高 ArkLaTex 的产量。这种动态为美国各地的上游投资和基础设施增长提供了重大机遇。当然,这不仅仅发生在市场力量重塑供应曲线的 ArkLaTex 领域。要实现“均衡”的市场需要许多流域的贡献。

原文链接/hartenergy

Sub-$2 Gas on Horizon As Supply Growth Swamps Natural Gas

More LNG demand in the future means a boost in production from the ArkLaTex will be necessary—presenting significant opportunities for upstream investment and infrastructure growth across the U.S.

Justin Carlson is co-founder and chief commercial officer of East Daley Analytics in Colorado.


Justin Carlson, East Daley
Justin Carlson, chief commerical officer, East Daley. (Source: East Daley Analytics)

Natural gas futures have fallen hard in 2023, breaking below $3/MMBtu for much of the year. While a mild winter is contributing to bearish sentiment, the bigger problem in the view of East Daley Analytics is overheated supply growth. Sub-$2 natural gas prices are now clearly in view, and there may not be a lot the market can do to prevent them.

The decline has been swift for natural gas, with front-month Henry Hub contracts down by over 60% since mid-December 2022. Henry Hub was trading near $7/MMBtu ahead of a bitter Arctic front, but temperatures in key Midwest and Northeast markets rapidly warmed in January and have been at times balmy, cutting into heating demand.

On March 6, the April front-month futures contract traded for $2.60/MMBtu, and the Henry Hub strip was below the $3 price level through June 2023.

The drop in natural gas has been a long time coming. East Daley has been warning clients for nearly 12 months of imbalances through the 2023 calendar caused by rapid production growth through our “Macro Supply and Demand Forecast,” our aggregate forecast of U.S. natural gas production, demand and imports and exports via pipelines and LNG.

We noted in our inaugural “Macro Supply and Demand Forecast,” released in February 2022: “The pre-balance storage moves above the five-year average starting in March 2023 due to growing production, surpassing 4 Tcf by 4Q23. If the market is not expecting this trend, prices could make a sharp reversal.”

While a mild winter and a shift in the demand outlook contributed to the market sentiment, the momentum from supply growth will be the unexpected “nail in the coffin” that holds prices down.

Overheated supply growth was a central theme of East Daley’s “2023 Dirty Little Secrets” report, released in December 2022, when we highlighted our outlook for 5 Bcf/d of “unconstrained” natural gas production growth in 2023 exit-to-exit, led by the Permian and ArkLaTex basins. At this pace of supply growth, storage would build rapidly and exceed the 4 Tcf upper limit on inventories before next winter.

Even after the latest market declines, the price cuts aren’t deep enough, according to our latest macro forecast. We see the need for a “shock to the system” to slow gas production growth and force producers to choke back wells and defer completions.

Too many rigs is the chief problem. The U.S. horizontal rig count totaled 715 rigs for the week of Feb. 24, 2023, according to East Daley’s Energy Data Studio, near the high of 724 horizontal rigs at the end of July 2022, when WTI crude prices were near $100/bbl.

Notably, we expect robust production growth to occur despite rig attrition this year, meaning we have already baked in declining rig counts over the course of 2023 in our macro model to help restore balance. We see supply growth as unavoidable due to the time lag before drilling and development activity leads to first production from new wells.

In the Permian, most growth will not arrive until late in the year when expansions to MPLX’s Whistler Pipeline (500 MMcf/d) and Kinder Morgan’s Permian Highway (550 MMcf/d) are schedule to begin service. Absent a drastic drop in crude oil prices, we do not expect the Permian to pull back. Thus, gas production must stop growing elsewhere to balance the market.

In our latest monthly “Macro Supply and Demand Forecast,” we provide two scenarios: an unbalanced forecast showing the severity of the natural gas supply problem and a “forced balance” scenario that avoids oversupply in 2023.

ArkLaTex Basin
Figure 2: ArkLaTex Basin. (Source: East Daley, Macro Supply and Demand Forecast)

Figure 2 shows how these scenarios contrast in the Haynesville (ArkLaTex), to pick one basin. The solid area shows the unbalanced forecast where drilling activity, primarily from Aethon, Comstock Resources and Southwestern Energy, drives over 1.5 Bcf/d of supply growth.

The conundrum in the Haynesville is that the rigs are already in place to create this new growth. Therefore, to lower near-term production toward the balanced market, we reduce activity by 19 rigs year-over-year.

We also build an inventory of 350 DUCs by year-end 2023 to defer the start of new production. Since we presented this case, several Haynesville producers including Comstock Resources and Chesapeake Energy have announced rig cuts, but in our view these announcements so far are insufficient to avoid oversupply. If producers choose not to build DUCs, it may take more drastic supply cuts, such as well shut-ins, to balance the market.

The natural gas story is a nuanced one. In the long term, a massive ramp in LNG demand will require a boost in production from the ArkLaTex. This dynamic presents significant opportunities for upstream investment and infrastructure growth across the U.S. Of course, it won’t just be in the ArkLaTex where market forces reshape the supply curve. To reach a “balanced” market will require contributions from many basins.