Weekly Energy Industry Summary

Commodity Fundamentals

Week of September 22, 2025

By The Numbers:

  • NG '25 prompt-month NYMEX natural gas settled at $2.81/MMbtu, down $.08 on Monday, September 22.
  • NG '25 prompt-month NYMEX natural gas settled at $3.04/MMbtu one week ago.
  • Prompt-month crude oil settled at $62.68/bbl., down $.08 on Monday, September 22.
  • Prompt-month crude oil settled at $63.30/bbl., one week ago.

Natural Gas Fundamentals - Neutral/Bearish

  • Weather for the coming week is neutral-to-bearish.  It's warmer in the northern tier offsetting any latent power-generation for air-conditioning load in the southern tier.
  • Storage inventories are neutral-to-bearish of gas in the coming week.  There is a clear line of sight to full inventory by the end of October.
  • Production is strong, averaging above 106 Bcf per day consistently through this month.
  • The supply/demand balance favors the supply side for the coming week.
  • Softness in the prompt and nearby months will persist.
  • The 2026-2030 five year strip was $3.78/MMbtu on Monday morning. In mid-June the 2026-2030 five-year-strip was trading at $3.86/MMbtu, down $.08/MMbtu over the past three months.
  • The soft pricing action is embedded in the prompt and nearby months. The backs are holding steady.
  •  The first winter forecasts will be presented in the market this week.

Crude Oil - Neutral

  • NYMEX (WTI) prompt-month-crude settled at $62.68/bbl., down $.04, on Monday, September 22.
  • Trump presses Europe to cut Russian energy and target China with tariffs.
  • The EU has acknowledged Trump's recently stated concerns over China but is waiting to see what kind of "follow-through" is in the cards.
  • Tariffs on India and China remain contentious in the EU.
  • Europe moves to cut Russian LNG a year sooner moving the complete ban to January 2027.
  • Eight OPEC members agreed earlier this month to modestly boost production.

Economy - Neutral

  • The Fed cut interest rates one quarter of a point.
  • St. Louis Fed President Musalem sees "limited room" for more cuts.
  • U.S. Treasury yields hold steady.
  • Bessent sees trade deal likely with China before November deadline.
  • Consumer prices rose at an annual rate of 2.9% in August, higher than the Fed target of 2%.
  • The Leading Economic Index fell 0.5% to 98.4 in August, amid growing concerns about the labor market, headwinds from tariffs and a weaker manufacturing sector.

Weather - Neutral

  • The general outlook for the entire country, excepting the West Coast is "warmer-than-normal."
  • The warmth in the northern tier will keep thermal load to a minimum.
  • The warmth in the southern tier will allow for latent air conditioning load.
  • The two things above will offset one another.
  • The tropics are still not a factor this week.

Weekly Natural Gas Report:

 
  • Inventories of natural gas in underground storage for the week ending September 12 are 3,433 Bcf; an injection of 90 Bcf was reported for the week ending September 12.
  • Gas inventories are 204 Bcf above the five-year average and 4 Bcf less than the same time last year. 
Values reflect week ending Sept. 19, 2025
Prices reflect week ending Sept. 19, 2025

Weekly Power Report:

Mid-Atlantic Electric Summary

  • The Mid-Atlantic Region’s forward power prices were slightly higher on the week as natural gas prices rallied above $3.00/MMBtu briefly before falling-off later in the week on bearish factors. The overall weather patten will continue to lean warm, expecting to post above too much above normal temperatures at times for much of the nation over the course of the next couple of weeks with the warmer anomalies focused farther north.  Some much-needed rain for the eastern US later this week will be accompanied by some warmer temperatures in the low to mid 80s. The above normal pattern is shown to persist during the first week of October but looks mostly mild across parts of the Midwest and East.  Forward power prices were 1% higher over the past week and 2% higher over the past month. The month-to-date, day-ahead settlement average price in West Hub is currently $36.61/MWh, which is 2% higher than last month and 18% higher than a year ago.
  • PJM Formally Initiates CIFP for Large Load Adjustments (LLA) - On 9/15, PJM officially kicked off the Critical Issue Fast Path (CIFP) to develop market rule changes in response to growing demand from data centers and other large loads.  PJM provided an overview of over 60 stakeholders’ input on PJM’s conceptual proposal originally shared on 8/18 with key themes including jurisdictional concerns, load forecast inaccuracy, and lack of support for the Non-Capacity-Backed Load (NCBL) concept.  PJM’s updated proposal remained mostly the same although PJM stated openness to other alternatives brought forward by stakeholders through the CIFP process.  The most notable change made by PJM is that, instead of triggering NCBL status based on any supply shortage, the revised approach only triggers NCBL if the shortage is due to planned large load additions.  The next CIFP meeting, referred to as Stage 2, will be held on 10/1.

Great Lakes Electric Summary

  • The Great Lakes Region’s forward power prices were slightly higher on the week as natural gas prices rallied above $3.00/MMBtu briefly before falling-off later in the week on bearish factors. The overall weather patten will continue to lean warm, expecting to post above too much above normal temperatures at times for much of the nation over the course of the next couple of weeks with the warmer anomalies focused farther north.  Some much-needed rain for the eastern US later this week will be accompanied by some warmer temperatures in the low to mid 80s. The above normal pattern is shown to persist during the first week of October but looks mostly mild across parts of the Midwest and East.  Power forward prices were 1% higher over the past week and 4% higher over the past month. The month-to-date, day-ahead settlement price average in COMED is $33.47/MWh, which is -10% lower than last month, while in AdHub the price is $35.87/MWh or -23% lower than last month.  In Michigan the month-to-date, index price average for September thus far is $36.11/MWh or -15% lower than August, while Ameren’s current price average is $34.98/MWh, which is -12% lower than last month.
  • PJM Formally Initiates CIFP for Large Load Adjustments (LLA) - On 9/15, PJM officially kicked off the Critical Issue Fast Path (CIFP) to develop market rule changes in response to growing demand from data centers and other large loads.  PJM provided an overview of over 60 stakeholders’ input on PJM’s conceptual proposal originally shared on 8/18 with key themes including jurisdictional concerns, load forecast inaccuracy, and lack of support for the Non-Capacity-Backed Load (NCBL) concept.  PJM’s updated proposal remained mostly the same although PJM stated openness to other alternatives brought forward by stakeholders through the CIFP process.  The most notable change made by PJM is that, instead of triggering NCBL status based on any supply shortage, the revised approach only triggers NCBL if the shortage is due to planned large load additions.  The next CIFP meeting, referred to as Stage 2, will be held on 10/1.

Northeast Energy Summary

  • During the New England Power Pool’s Markets Committee Meetings (MC) across September 9-11, ISO-NE kicked off its next phase of Capacity Auction Reform (CAR) discussion with its much-anticipated proposal for seasonal auction design and resource capacity accreditation.  The discussion began with a refresher on the ISO-NE’s Marginal Reliability Impact accreditation approach first introduced in summer 2022 as part of the Resource Capacity Accreditation (RCA) reforms but paused since early 2024 to allow development of a prompt capacity market construct.  While the accreditation design remains conceptually the same as proposed under RCA, ISO-NE warned of some potentially significant changes, including replacing the Qualified Capacity construct with a Maximum Capability concept, as well as changes to the GE Multi-Area Reliability Simulation modeling of resources to determine resource Marginal Reliability Impact values.
  • The other significant update from the original RCA design is the introduction of a market-constraint approach to allocate non-firm gas capability during the winter.  ISO-NE’s 2022 RCA winter de-rate proposal was strongly opposed by several stakeholders, though the controversy subsided when RCA was effectively shelved in favor of focusing on CAR.  Non-firm gas capability discussions will resume in November with a presentation from the Analysis Group reviewing a gas availability followed by ISO‑NE unveiling its gas market constraint accreditation approach at the December MC meeting.
  • 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

  • Yesterday brought the beginning of fall with the Autumnal Equinox, but summer temperatures aren’t leaving yet as above and much-above average temperatures are in the forecast for this week across the West. Sacramento and the LA Basin are going to see daytime highs in the low-90s today 9/23, while Las Vegas highs hover in the mid-90s for much of this week and Phoenix climbs into the low to mid-100s on Weds and Thurs. Temperatures across California are looking more seasonal next week thanks to an upper-level low currently sitting off the coast of SoCal. After a seasonable finish to the month for California and the Southwest, the models then suggest above normal temperatures build back into the region for the first week of October.
  • Excessive warmth in the weather pattern is starting to retreat, and it is showing up in the power profiles across the CAISO footprint. Without the higher temperatures, renewable generation is eating away at a larger portion of demand which means the need for natural gas-fired generation downshifts. This is appearing consistently in the cash prices for SoCal city gate as they’ve dropped from levels above $4.00 per MMBtu to numbers starting with a $3, moving in the direction of October prices at the city gate that are coming in around $3.50 for the month. PG&E city gate numbers are holding above the $4.00 MMBtu mark. Subdued prices reflect a comfortable storage position across the state, but don’t expect the bottom to fall out of basis. Support will remain for prices as there is a need to keep refilling the caverns to replace what was used during the strong dose of heat across state last week, and the pressure to hit tank tops for storage as we move towards the first week of November. PG&E continues to see maintenance upstream on Gas Transmission Northwest (GTN) hod back flows at Redwood. Helping relieve pressure on thermal units is the return of the Helms pump-storage units which have been offline for maintenance.
  • The deadline is rapidly approaching for the Colorado River Basin states to come up with a plan for divvying up the river’s waters and operating its reservoirs and other plumbing infrastructure after 2026. “Immediate and substantial reductions” in Colorado River water use could be needed much sooner than anyone predicted, according to a study published two weeks ago. The problem: People are using more water than the amount that has been coming down the river, and it could reach a tipping point by the end of next summer. That’s the conclusion of a study involving research and collaboration among four universities — the University of New Mexico, Utah State University, Arizona State University, and the University of Colorado. Their analysis found that a repeat of the 2025 water year, which ends at the end of this month, will result in consumptive water use in the basin exceeding the Colorado River’s natural flow by at least 3.6 million acre-feet. That would potentially use up the remainder of the “realistically accessible storage” in Lake Mead and Lake Powell, constraining reservoir operations as early as July 2026. It will arrive sooner if the region experiences another dry winter. Lake Mead is the largest reservoir in the U.S. by capacity — capable of storing more than 26 million acre-feet of water, according to the Bureau of Reclamation. It is followed by Lake Powell, which can store 24 million acre-feet.

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