NGI’s managing editor of markets Kevin Dobbs joins colleague Leticia Gonzales, managing director of North American natural gas pricing, to size up the state of the U.S. natural gas market facing a demand explosion unlike anything it's seen in years. The two break down what's driving the surge, from AI-powered data centers that could account for up to 8 Bcf/d demand by decade’s end to a massive LNG buildout adding another 15 Bcf/d over the next five years. Drawing from the LDC Gas Forums Mid-Continent conference in Chicago, they tackle questions such as: Can production ramp fast enough to meet this demand? Where will the new supply come from? And with forward prices already climbing, what happens if a brutal winter throws another curveball into the mix?
In the latest episode of NGI’s Hub & Flow podcast, NGI’s Christopher Lenton, managing editor of Mexico, sits down with Mexico City-based energy analyst Gonzalo Monroy to explore Mexico’s deep dependence on U.S. natural gas and the country’s uphill battle to develop its own resources. Monroy, managing director of consultancy Grupo Mexicano de Energía y Construcción, outlines how Mexico’s power sector relies on U.S. pipeline gas, while years of underinvestment and weak regulatory frameworks have left domestic production stagnant. From stalled deepwater and shale projects to the lack of natural gas storage, Monroy explains why efforts to boost production face steep economic and technical hurdles. The conversation also delves into Mexico’s LNG ambitions, private sector interest in partnering with CFE, and the uncertain role of Pemex—painting a picture of an energy landscape where ambitious plans risk falling short, leaving Mexico tethered to U.S. supplies.
NGI’s Andrew Baker and Kevin Dobbs sit down for deep dive into the state of North American natural gas markets, with a particular emphasis on the western United States and Canada. The discussion spans key factors shaping supply, demand, and price outlooks – from a coming surge in data center energy needs to abundant Canadian production and persistent infrastructure constraints. Drawing on insights from the recent LDC Gas Forum in Denver, Baker highlights the interplay of emerging demand drivers with today’s elevated supply picture. The editors also examine what forward curves reveal about fundamentals heading into winter and beyond, offering perspective on where the market may be headed in the months ahead.
NGI’s Jamison Cocklin, managing editor of LNG, is joined by LNG Allies CEO Fred Hutchison for a wide-ranging conversation to discuss the historic buildout of natural gas export infrastructure along the Gulf Coast. Fifteen export terminals are operating, being commissioned or are under construction. Several more are close to moving ahead. What’s driving the momentum? Will more projects be sanctioned soon? How is the industry navigating tariffs, and how is all the growth likely to impact U.S. natural gas prices? Cocklin and Hutchison answer these questions and touch on other themes shaping the direction of the industry.
In the latest episode of NGI’s Hub & Flow podcast, NGI’s Christopher Lenton, managing editor of Mexico, sits down with Rice University’s Francisco Monaldi, director of the Latin America Energy Program at the Baker Institute. Together, they dive into the energy policy paradox in the United States, where the push for energy dominance is colliding with market realities, triggering ripple effects across global oil and gas markets. Monaldi, a leading Latin America energy expert, outlines the challenges for Mexico’s Pemex, which faces a perfect storm of soaring debt, crumbling production, and regulatory barriers that are stifling investment and threatening Mexico’s energy future. While there are faint signs of progress through service contracts and potential projects tapping unconventional resources, Lenton and Monaldi explore why these efforts won’t be enough to reverse Pemex’s downward trajectory and dependence on U.S. natural gas imports.
NGI’s LNG editors Jamison Cocklin and Jacob Dick examine the market implications of Canada’s entry into large-scale LNG exports, following Shell plc’s LNG Canada facility shipping its first cargo in June. Despite the milestone, Canadian gas prices continue falling relative to Lower 48 counterparts as the country’s producers aggressively ramp production ahead of demand. The discussion dives into the details of LNG Canada’s startup, timelines for other projects advancing on the country’s west coast, and when supply-demand rebalancing could impact U.S.-Canadian price differentials. The duo also cover the unique advantages Canadian LNG offers, including shorter shipping times to Asia, as well the challenges like building infrastructure in remote areas.
NGI markets editor Chris Newman sits down with Bracewell partners Bryan Clark and Jared Berg to discuss how companies can tap associated gas supply in the Permian Basin to fuel innovative co-located power arrangements and potentially receive higher pricing than at the oft-volatile West Texas benchmark, Waha. While data centers housing artificial intelligence grab headlines for their massive appetite for electricity, these projects represent a broader trend of associated gas assets being monetized for various in-basin power needs. Bigger projects may solve gas supply issues, but they bring operational complexity. Clark and Berg give examples of existing and proposed off-grid uses and the challenges they face.
NGI’s managing editor of markets, Kevin Dobbs, interviews Pinebrook Energy Advisors’ Andy Huenefeld, managing partner. They delve into supplies in storage, production, weather-driven demand and export activity – with a special focus on prices in the Midwest and East. The latest U.S. Energy Information storage report showed overall inventories were 6% above the five-year average, but surpluses in the Midwest and East were notably leaner after June heat waves in those regions. While the winter heating season is far off, natural gas storage is in a markedly different situation than last year. There are likely to be ample supplies stocked for next season, but with producers able to fast respond to cash market price signals and LNG feed gas demand bumping as export facilities ramp, Huenefeld details a dynamic season ahead.
NGI markets editors Chris Newman and Jodi Shafto discuss whether long-dormant pipeline projects in the region could finally break ground under the new administration based on Jodi’s takeaways from the recent LDC Gas Forum Northeast conference in Boston. The duo examine the stark price divide between the pipeline haves and have nots. Appalachian gas traded near zero while New England spiked to $33.50/MMBtu this winter. With data center demand surging, the infrastructure gap could become even more critical. They discuss industry sentiment on the prospects for reviving projects like Williams' Constitution Pipeline. They also review how the region’s gas pipelines and producers are positioned to handle explosive AI-driven demand.
NGI’s Patrick Rau, senior vice president of research and analysis, checks all the boxes in sharing his expertise about the outlook for U.S. natural gas in a sitdown with NGI’s Carolyn Davis, managing editor of news. Where are domestic natural gas prices headed into 2026? Pat says it’s not one thing or another, as rising demand is ahead as more LNG export capacity comes online, and as industrial and residential/commercial sector consumption climbs. E&Ps are likely waiting for bullish natural gas price signals to spur activity in the second half of 2025, but they will be accelerating their activity, according to Pat. The odds of adding natural gas infrastructure, both midstream and by utilities, also is discussed as hyperscalers compete to build a plethora of data centers.
Mexico’s imports of U.S. natural gas continue to break records despite macroeconomic and regulatory uncertainty. NGI senior editor Andrew Baker and Christopher Lenton, managing editor of Mexico and Latin America, discuss the demand- and supply-side factors shaping Mexico’s gas market, and why it matters for the United States. Lenton recently attended the U.S.-Mexico Gas Summit in San Antonio TX, where topics ranged from data centers to LNG terminals to the challenges facing state oil company Petróleos Mexicanos, aka Pemex. He breaks down which demand segments are growing fastest, and how they are affected by pricing dynamics north of the border.
In this episode of NGI’s Hub & Flow, NGI Markets Editor Kevin Dobbs talks with Paragon Global Markets LLC’s Steve Blair, managing director of institutional energy sales. The two discuss the summer ahead in natural gas markets, with a special focus on the densely populated and heavy gas-consuming Northeast. Blair and Dobbs address relatively modest gas production and lingering storage deficits in the East as well as domestic weather demand expectations for the summer ahead and beyond. Wildcards up for discussion include the ongoing buildout of the U.S. export complex and the Trump administration’s on-again, off-again tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico.
Ben Cahill, director for energy markets and policy at the University of Texas at Austin, joins NGI's Jamison Cocklin, managing editor of LNG, to discuss how the trade war and other challenges could impact rapid U.S. LNG export growth. They explore supply, demand and price trends that could emerge as the Trump administration works to balance the U.S. trade deficit. They also discuss other challenges like the European Union's methane emissions regulations and LNG production growth in the Middle East that could curb the appetite for North American LNG at a time when it's growing at an unprecedented rate.
A new player has entered North American natural gas markets with data centers to power artificial intelligence on the rise in the United States. Natural gas access to power the facilities is a top concern for the major companies involved in the sector, and demand from new data centers could have a meaningful impact on future gas growth. NGI’s Leticia Gonzales, managing director for North American natural gas pricing, and senior markets editor Chris Newman dig into this issue. Plus, with summer just around the corner, the duo examine the current state of the market flipping the script for regional price relationships as cooling demand takes over as the major pull on gas use.
With the ramp up of two LNG projects on the Gulf Coast this year and more demand on the way in 2026, all eyes are on the swift rise in prices. But will producers be incentivized to swiftly grow production volumes after a prolonged period of low prices? NGI's Jacob Dick, senior editor of LNG, talks with East Daley Analytics’ Jack Weixel, senior director of energy analysis, about the price and production outlook headed into 2026 and how volatility may be here to stay.
NGI’s Christopher Lenton managing editor of Mexico, speaks to Sergio Chapa, senior energy analyst at Poten & Partners, on the latest trends in North American LNG and natural gas markets. Times have changed in the past few months with natural gas roaring to the forefront of the U.S. energy discussion. New LNG facilities are ramping up and other projects have taken on added impetus. How does the Trump administration in the United States impact natural gas supply and demand? How about Mexico projects sourcing U.S. gas? When are major projects like Plaquemines and Corpus Christi Stage 3 ramping up? What about Argentina's LNG ambitions? Lenton and Chapa get to the bottom of all of this and more.
NGI’sKevin Dobbs, senior markets editor, and Patrick Rau, senior vice president of research and analysis, dig into the state of natural gas fundamentals and price implications. Coming off earnings season and executive outlooks shared on analyst calls, the two discuss the various factors that could influence producers to further ramp up supply – from key price thresholds to macroeconomic conditions. They also delve into long-term demand drivers, including swelling calls by LNG facilities for feed gas and a growing number of data centers with robust energy needs. Rau and Dobbs tie together supply and demand and how the various puts and takes could line up to impact natural gas prices this year and beyond.
After back-to-back warm winters, this year’s brutally cold showing has rapidly depleted Lower 48 natural gas inventories, flipping them from surplus to deficit and creating a challenging outlook for the upcoming injection season. With storage now sitting below five-year averages and record LNG exports consuming more supply, the market faces a steeper climb to rebuild stocks amid caution by producers to bring on more supply. A hot summer could siphon gas away from injections to make the task harder. NGI’s Leticia Gonzales, managing director of North American natural gas pricing, and senior markets editor Chris Newman examine the market’s dramatic shift from surplus to deficit, producers’ restraint despite higher prices, and the impact of structural LNG demand growth on domestic markets. They also look ahead to how the evolving market fundamentals could shape gas prices through summer and into winter 2025/26.
NGI’s Christopher Lenton, managing editor for Mexico speaks to Wood Mackenzie vice chair for the Americas Ed Crooks on the swirl of executive orders signed by President Trump and how they are impacting natural gas fundamentals. Crooks delves into the outlook for the North American natural gas market and the impacts from tariffs, both those deemed certain and levies yet unknown. The discussion also covers oncoming LNG supply, and U.S. trade relations with Canada and Mexico, coal-to-gas switching, the recent slowing trend of an energy transition to renewables and how changing rules are being felt in the natural gas market. Crooks explains whether the United States is experiencing an “energy emergency” – or if it is about to be as artificial intelligence comes online.
After a year of regulatory slowdowns for LNG projects, the Trump administration has come in with agency shakeups, policy changes and executive orders. What does it mean for U.S. LNG project development and future natural gas demand? NGI’s senior LNG editor Jacob Dick interviews Arbo’s Tom Sharp, director of permitting intelligence, about what is happening on the regulatory front and why litigation risk still looms large for some LNG export projects.