We have two days of data due to the fact that we are in a new month and currently don’t have 10 days of data to present for July.

U.S. Natural Gas Supply is Expected to Reach 110 Billion Cubic Feet Per Day by 2035, According to Navigant’s Global Energy Practice

The opening of new export facilities in the United States marks a new era for the global natural gas market, report concludes

CHICAGO–(BUSINESS WIRE)–A new report from Navigant’s global Energy Practice, the North American Natural Gas Market Outlook, Year-End 2014, examines the state of the natural gas industry and provides forecasts for supply and demand through 2035 Driven by ongoing gas shale growth in the Northeast, production of natural gas in the United States continued its strong growth trajectory in 2014, increasing by 6.1 billion cubic feet per day (Bcfd), or 9.2 percent, over the course of the year. More growth in gas production is expected in the future, particularly from the Marcellus shale formation, with the only possible constraint the rate of infrastructure development in the region.  According to the North American Natural Gas Market Outlook, Year-End 2014, published by Navigant’s Energy Practice, U.S. natural gas supply is expected to increase from 72 Bcfd in 2015 to nearly 110 Bcfd by 2035.

“Supply side growth continues to drive most other aspects of the natural gas industry in North America,” says Gordon Pickering, Director with Navigant’s Energy Practice. “As we explain in the Natural Gas Market Outlook, this strong supply basis is giving rise to a new chapter of the gas industry, with the culmination of a half decade of new LNG project development and the beginning of a new, global market for natural gas.”

The opening of this new market is signaled by the opening of new export capacity on the U.S. Gulf Coast, according to the Natural GasMarket Outlook. The opening of Sabine Pass will signify the point at which North America becomes connected to the global gas market for the first time in history—with truly global consequences for gas markets in North America and around the world. Those consequences will become fully apparent as more LNG export projects come online, the report concludes.

weekly basis

http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20150401005260/en/U.S.-Natural-Gas-Supply-Expected-Reach-110#.VZwLAvlVhBc