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Weekly Energy Industry Summary

Commodity Fundamentals

Week of July 13, 2026

By the Numbers:
 
  • Prompt-month natural gas settled at $2.90/MMbtu, down $.05 on Monday, July 13.
  • Prompt-month natural gas settled at $3.18/MMbtu on Monday, June 29.
  • Prompt-month crude oil (WTI) settled at $78.14/bbl., up $6.73 on Monday, July 13.
  • Prompt month crude oil (WTI) settled at $70.92/bbl., on Monday, June 29.

Natural Gas Fundamentals - Neutral/Bearish

  • Maintenance at the Freeport LNG terminal (which began July 10) and lower nominations at Sabine Pass have reduced LNG sendouts in recent days by about 1 Bcf per day.  Freeport has said that the maintenance issue will last through most of August.
  • Production remains strong amid weakening pricing action.  Month-to-date production averaged 109.6 Bcf per day, and year-to-date production averaged 108.9 Bcf per day versus 105 Bcf per day for the same period last year.
  • A heat wave is on in the Eastern U.S., but will break down next week to more seasonal temperatures will a "cooler-than-normal" bias.
  • Power-generation demand for July has averaged 47.5 Bcf per day versus 46.7 Bcf per day last July.
  • 12-month natural gas strips are trading near or below the three-year low; 2027-3031 settled at $3.35, $3.61, $3.62, $3.57, and $3.51 respectively.
  • Reduced LNG sendouts and strong production, coupled with a break in the weather next week provided the opportunity for gas to gap down.

Crude Oil - Bullish

  • Prompt-month (WTI) crude oil surged yesterday settling at $78.14/bbl., up $6.73. As of this writing, prompt-month WTI is up $1.93 at $80.10/bbl.
  • President Trump has reimposed the naval blockade in the Persian Gulf, and U.S. forces have been carrying out bombing runs on Iranain targets in response to Iranian attacks on shipping and Gulf neighbors.
  • The U.S. military said it conducted a third consecutive night of strikes on Iran Monday, that included the first combat use of sea drones to hit a naval base. 
  • The UAE Ministry of Defense said Iranian missiles killed one crew member and injured eight in an attack on two oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz.

Economy - Neutral

  • Consumer prices rose 3.5% annually in June, less than expected as energy prices eased.
  • The new chairman of the Federal Reserve, told Congress that the Fed has "no tolerance" for high inflation.
  • Current 30-year mortgage rates are stuck at 6.5%.
  • Steady but strong U.S. job growth slowed in June as employers added a "lower-than-expected" 57,000 positions.
  • The U.S. unemployment rate fell to 4.2% in June.
  • The labor participation rate dropped to a five year low of 61.5% in June.

Weather - Bullish/Neutral

  • A heat wave in the east combined with high humidity will persist through the weekend but then break down to more seasonal temperatures with a "cooler-than-normal" bias next week.
  • The West and interior west are very hot.
  • The Southeast is hot and humid, but intermittent rain keeps the day-time highs somewhat under control.

 

 

Weekly Natural Gas Report

  • Inventories of natural gas in underground storage for the week ending July 3 are 2,983 Bcf; an injection of 61 Bcf was reported for the week ending July 3. Stocks were 15 Bcf lower than this time last year and 185 Bcf above the five-year-average.
Values reflect week ending July 10, 2026
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Prices reflect week ending July 10, 2026

Weekly Power Report:

Mid-Atlantic Electric Summary

  • The Mid-Atlantic Region’s forward power prices were slightly higher over the past week as market fundamentals stabilized after the extreme heat that blanketed much of the eastern half of the nation leading-up to the holiday weekend.  On Friday, natural gas futures dropped further as robust supply intersected with unexpected maintenance work at Freeport LNG that curbed demand. The August NYMEX natural gas contract settled at $2.94/MMBtu. Natural gas prices weakened despite renewed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz as cooler late-July weather forecasts, recovering wind generation, and lower LNG feed-gas demand from Freeport maintenance outweighed the impact of geopolitical risks.  A heat ridge in the East this week is expected to weaken, allowing milder air to move into the pattern.  As a result, below-normal temperatures should follow the heat wave in the East, with above-normal temperatures confined mainly to the West.  The forward electricity prices for the 2027-2031 strips were 1% higher over the past week and 2% higher over the past month.  The month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price for July thus far in West Hub is $112.15/MWh which is 98% higher than June’s final settlement price average of $56.56/MWh.
  • PJM Performance During the 6/29 to 7/5 Heat Wave - At the 7/9 Operating Committee meeting, PJM provided a presentation of the grid’s performance during the hot weather event that occurred in the week of 6/29.  PJM hit an all-time peak (after Demand Response is added in) of 168,158 MW on 7/2 at 5:55 PM, with instantaneous load of 162,713 MW.  While reliability was maintained throughout the hot weather event, PJM noted several operational challenges including above average generation outages and deliverability concerns.  Temperatures remained in the 90s throughout the week of 6/29, but 7/2 was the most challenging operating day, with PJM experiencing record RTO load-weighted temperatures, a peak heat index of 105° F and a record Temperature-Humidity Index of 85.  PJM implemented several alerts and actions to maintain reliable system operations during the week's forecasted extreme heat and humidity, including Hot Weather Alerts for the Western Region for 6/29 and for the entire PJM footprint from 6/30 through 7/3, which were extended through 7/4 and 7/5 for the Mid-Atlantic and Dominion zones, respectively.

Great Lakes Electric Summary

  • The Great Lakes Region’s forward power prices were slightly higher over the past week as market fundamentals stabilized after the extreme heat that blanketed much of the eastern half of the nation during the first week of July.  On Friday, natural gas futures dropped further as robust supply intersected with unexpected maintenance work at Freeport LNG that curbed demand.  The August NYMEX natural gas contract settled at $2.94/MMBtu.  Natural gas prices weakened despite renewed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz as cooler late-July weather forecasts, recovering wind generation, and lower LNG feed-gas demand from Freeport maintenance outweighed the impact of geopolitical risks.  A heat ridge in the East this week is expected to weaken, allowing milder air to move into the pattern.  As a result, below-normal temperatures should follow the heat wave in the East, with above-normal temperatures confined mainly to the West.  The forward electricity prices for the 2027-2031 strips were 1% higher over the past week and the past month.  The month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price for July in COMED is $77.13/MWh or is 119% higher than June’s final settlement price average of $35.20/MWh, while in AdHub the month-to-date average price is $85.48/MWh or is 89% higher than June’s final price average of $45.23/MWh.  In Michigan, the month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price for July is $89.49/MWh or is 105% higher than June’s final price average of $43.59/MWh, while in Ameren the month-to-date price is averaging $77.96/MWh or is 110% higher than June’s final settlement price of $37.08/MWh. 
  • PJM Performance During the 6/29 to 7/5 Heat Wave - At the 7/9 Operating Committee meeting, PJM provided a presentation of the grid’s performance during the hot weather event that occurred in the week of 6/29.  PJM hit an all-time peak (after Demand Response is added in) of 168,158 MW on 7/2 at 5:55 PM, with instantaneous load of 162,713 MW.  While reliability was maintained throughout the hot weather event, PJM noted several operational challenges including above average generation outages and deliverability concerns.  Temperatures remained in the 90s throughout the week of 6/29 but 7/2 was the most challenging operating day, with PJM experiencing record RTO load-weighted temperatures, a peak heat index of 105° F and a record Temperature-Humidity Index of 85.  PJM implemented several alerts and actions to maintain reliable system operations during the week's forecasted extreme heat and humidity, including Hot Weather Alerts for the Western Region for 6/29 and for the entire PJM footprint from 6/30 through 7/3, which were extended through 7/4 and 7/5 for the Mid-Atlantic and Dominion zones, respectively.
  • MISO fared well during the hot weather alert that it issued from June 29th through July 5th despite issuing conservative operations for July 2nd and 3rd.  Throughout the event, the RTO was stable, as surplus capacity and strong solar output kept the system in-check, with minimal negative impact.  On July 1, MISO expected a peak demand of nearly 126 GW but ended up serving about 124 GW.  The heat dome sent temperatures well into the upper-90s and the heat indexes into triple digits for much of the system footprint during that time.  The system came within 2 GW of its record for peak demand at 125 GW.  Des Moines, IA reached a high of 99 degrees F, while La Crosse, WI tied a record warm low temperature reading of 81 degrees F.   RTO Insider

Northeast Energy Summary

  • The return of military strikes in the Persian Gulf has both oil and global natural gas higher though not nearly as high as initial post-strike prices back in March. Nonetheless, New England forward markets have elevated on account of those increased risks and the correlation to global natural gas prices due to winter LNG imports. Calendar 2027 and 2028 forwards increased 1.5 and 0.8%, respectively while 2029 and 2030 terms dipped slightly by under 1%. We also saw upward pressure from a PJM forward price rally. Despite bearish natural gas fundamentals, PJM forwards have moved significantly higher (vs. natural gas prices) creating what's known as "heat rate expansion". The pre-July 4 heat wave and expected 90+ degree temps expected on the East Coast this week could be one of the drivers of such buying. Both New England and New York see residual effects from these moves because the PJM market is the most liquid of the power markets and participants in these markets might be experiencing a touch of FOMO as far as upside price risk protection.
  • Speaking of upside pricing, the July 1 - 3 heatwave that reached New England did create some momentary price spikes but overall the grid managed through it well without much incident. Day-ahead prices on the evening of July 2 did surpass $900/MWh but was only for a couple of hours with the overall daily average reaching $300/MWh. Additionally, the system did reach a year-to-date peak demand on July 2 between 6 and 7pm at 25,289 MW. This day/hour could be of particular importance in capacity cost allocation for the capacity year June 2027 and May 2028 though a hotter day eliciting a higher peak at any point during the balance of the year could unseat it. Customers that were able to curtail during that time may have been able to capture some future cost avoidance/current Peak Response rebates if the July 2 date/hour holds at the coincident peak for the region.
  • Hot summer temps were the headline for New York during the first week of July. A multiday heat wave spanning the July 4th holiday ( July 1st - July 4th) led to major price spikes in the Real-Time and Day-Ahead markets – with daily average prices in the triple digits and hourly prices in several zones soaring above $1000/MWh during peak hours. Based on NYISO Hourly Real-Time System Load Data – last week’s peak occurred on July 2 Hour Ending (HE) 19 at 31,097 MW.  For now, this value sets the statewide preliminary ICAP peak. Historically peak load has occurred in the mid/late-afternoon hours, but deployment of behind-the-meter/utility scale solar has shifted that trend. When solar output is at its peak mid-afternoon, it “shaves” or offsets load when it’s at its strongest, but as solar output begins to decline into the late/afternoon early evening, steady demand can push net “peak” load higher.  We saw this trend last summer and are continuing to see it this year.
  • The Champlain Hudson Power Express (CHPE) remains offline after a second unplanned outage July 4th, with the outage now extended through at least this Friday according to Hydro-Québec. The outage comes at a critical time, as forecasts call for another round of intense heat and humidity across the Northeast this week, with heat indices potentially approaching 100°F. When operational, CHPE supplied more than 10% of New York City load during peak demand periods, helping alleviate transmission constraints and reduce reliance on higher-cost generation. Its continued absence is expected to increase bullish pressure on NYISO energy prices, particularly in Zone J, while driving greater dispatch of downstate oil-fired generation and likely reintroducing transmission bottlenecks observed during the recent heat wave. The 1,250-MW project is considered a key component of New York’s clean energy strategy, making the repeated outages a growing reliability and market concern.

ERCOT Energy Summary

CAISO, Desert Southwest and Pacific Northwest Energy Summary

  • The 2026 Wimbledon tennis champions were crowned over the weekend, which means that we’re at the midpoint of summer and daily high temperatures in the West are really going to start to sail. Right on schedule, a heat dome will be wobbling across the Rockies and interior West during the next 10-14 days, and every balancing authority from British Columbia to the CAISO and over to the Rockies is set to serve up heat this week. The National Weather Service (NWS) posted an extreme heat watch across SoCal for today through Thursday (7/16), with inland valley temperatures expected to land somewhere in the harsh 110 – 112o degree range and push coastal areas into the low 90s. The setup is a familiar summertime picture for this market: a high-pressure ridge parks over the region combined with offshore flow that pushes hot, dry desert air toward the coast as the marine layer retreats. In this case the marine influence looks like it will increase slightly late this week into the weekend, pushing temperatures down slightly, then we expect the ridge will rebuild a bit farther west again next week and bring a few more days of 90s to Sacramento and the LA Basin.
  • This persistent heat wave is directly altering dynamics in the regional natural gas market, where robust power-burn demand remains the primary driver of consumption. Despite building thermal pressure, combined California gas storage comes into the week in good shape at roughly 292 Bcf, PG&E’s share of that inventory is down slightly to 184.3 Bcf, while SoCalGas posted a modest build last week bringing its needle up to 107.8 Bcf. Pipeline system strain remains evident, as PG&E triggered a Stage 2 High Operational Flow Oder (OFO) heading into the weekend and SoCalGas continues to issue near daily OFOs, which also comes across in prices with gas at the city gates for this past weekend’s three-day package dropping to $1.98/MMBtu at PG&E and $2.79/MMBtu at SoCal. We expect the High OFO button to get a rest this week as temperatures build. Looking ahead, traders are also tracking structural changes along the Western Seaboard, notably the first cargo departure from the Costa Azul LNG facility in Mexico, which introduces a new supply variable as summer deepens.
  • The CAISO grid finds itself on strong footing this summer given the secure natural gas storage position, relatively full reservoirs and potent midday solar resources. The California Energy Commission (CEC) recently presented on behalf of the state’s energy agencies, reporting that the 2026 summer grid outlook shows marked improvement compared to recent years. Under both standard and extreme planning scenarios—including conditions like the record-breaking heat events of 2020 and 2022—no system-wide shortfalls are currently projected. Since 2020, approximately 32,000 megawatts of new capacity have come online, including 16,000 MW of batteries. The most significant threat to grid reliability remains the potential for compound events—particularly prolonged, west-wide heatwaves occurring simultaneously with wildfire activity that could fade solar output and damage critical transmission infrastructure. An open question is whether the Governor decides to tackle some of California’s most difficult energy and environmental issues before he exits stage far left at the end of this year, including offshore wind, battery storage siting, data center impacts, and maybe maybe the long-running debate over what to do with coastal power plants that use ocean water for cooling. The Once-Through Cooling (OTC) plant issue could resurface if lawmakers decide to kick the hornet’s nest that is the tension between environmental protection and grid reliability, especially as the CAISO connects more intermittent resources while transitioning out older generating resources.
  • As a reminder, there are eight coastal plants that continue to operate utilizing Once-Through Cooling technology under compliance extensions or operational pathways managed by the State Water Resources Control Board. The ones likely to get attention this year are those operating under Strategic Reliability Reserve Extensions set to expire on December 31, 2026. These units operate under a state-funded contract valued at approximately $1.2B from the Electricity Supply Strategic Reliability Reserve Program. To prevent grid emergencies and manage summer peak demands, there are three specific natural gas OTC units that keep seeing their lifespan extended:
    • Ormond Beach 1 & 2: 1,491 MW
    • Alamitos 3, 4, & 5: 1,141 MW
    • Huntington Beach 2: 227 MW

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