ChemAg15 said:
Natural gas is trading for $140+/MMBTU at Katy hub today. Natural gas demand is nuts right now.
How does this impact the end user? Say my monthly Atmos bill? Am i burning a $1,000 fire right now with my gas logs???
ChemAg15 said:
Natural gas is trading for $140+/MMBTU at Katy hub today. Natural gas demand is nuts right now.
Rustys-Beef-o-Reeno said:
There are traders who made a decade bonuses this week
And also those who may be fired
Comeby! said:Rustys-Beef-o-Reeno said:
There are traders who made a decade bonuses this week
And also those who may be fired
HSC closed at $181/mmbtu.
Boat Shoes said:Comeby! said:Rustys-Beef-o-Reeno said:
There are traders who made a decade bonuses this week
And also those who may be fired
HSC closed at $181/mmbtu.
This might be a dumb question but being a 3 day weekend, does that mean that daily price carries through to Tuesday?
Jdrexgman said:Boat Shoes said:Comeby! said:Rustys-Beef-o-Reeno said:
There are traders who made a decade bonuses this week
And also those who may be fired
HSC closed at $181/mmbtu.
This might be a dumb question but being a 3 day weekend, does that mean that daily price carries through to Tuesday?
It's actually a 4-Day weekend strip since the market is closed on Monday.
The Perfect Storm
Dirty Mike and the Boys said:
You saw March forward month pricing. That's what is usually shown on the ticker on your daytime cable TV stock show. The $100-$600 gas is physical gas being traded at locations on the grid for delivery for this weekend (Sat-Tues).
It's a bit more complicated than that. Natural gas is mostly methane but there are other hydrocarbons present so your lbs/mol can vary a bit.ChemAg15 said:
If you really want to get technical, a SCF is actually a set number of molecules.
One SCF = 379.3 lb-mols
One lb-mol = 453.6 mols
One mol = 6.022 x 10^23 molecules
lb3 said:It's a bit more complicated than that. Natural gas is mostly methane but there are other hydrocarbons present so your lbs/mol can vary a bit.ChemAg15 said:
If you really want to get technical, a SCF is actually a set number of molecules.
One SCF = 379.3 lb-mols
One lb-mol = 453.6 mols
One mol = 6.022 x 10^23 molecules
CaptnCarl said:
Thanks. This sparked my interest, so I did some research this morning. Everything I've seen has been 60, but I think the small pressure difference correlates to the 8 degree temp change. See Pg 22.
https://www.api.org/~/media/Files/Oil-and-Natural-Gas/Natural-Gas/API-Understanding-Natural-Gas-Markets.pdf
Apparently in 2006 FERC issued a policy regulating the policy of gas quality and interchangeability. In the past, the gas quality was governed by the shipper tariff. Shipper A could be carrying 1030 BTU/cf and Shipper B 998 BTU/cf. Spot prices traded in $/Btu settles the quality difference.
Here's the FERC policy if any of you are interested:
https://www.ferc.gov/sites/default/files/2020-04/G-1_29.pdf
CaptnCarl said:
Thanks Avagadro. User name checks out.