February 5

NYC Natural Gas Soars to Highest Since 2003 Amid Bitter Cold – “Lighting the fire for the gas stove ban.”

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ENB Pub Note: This will only “lite the fire” for the gas stove ban.   

Natural gas prices skyrocketed in New York and Boston as bitter cold descends, boosting demand for the furnace fuel.

Next-day gas deliveries into a section of the Iroquois Gas pipeline that hauls Canadian gas into New York traded at an average of $164.80 per million British thermal units on Thursday, a 14-fold increase from Wednesday, according to Bloomberg data. That’s the highest since at least 2003.

Gas at Boston’s Algonquin City Gate Hub for Friday delivery traded at an average of $58, up from $12 on the previous day.

Prices eased on Friday, with weekend gas deliveries trading below $10 across major Northeast hubs, according to Paul Phillips, a senior strategist at Uplift Energy Strategy. That’s still about four times higher than the benchmark futures contract.

New York City is forecast to see bitter cold through early Saturday with temperatures dropping as low as 0F (-18C), according to the National Weather Service. Bostonians are being warned to stay indoors because the wind chill will make it feel like minus 30F. Temperatures are expected to start rebounding later Saturday and climb above freezing by Sunday.

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