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Eia underground gas storage

30.12.2020
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The weekly stocks generally are the volumes of working gas as of the report date. Changes in reported stock levels reflect all events affecting working gas in storage, including injections, withdrawals, and reclassifications between base and working gas, including information on estimated measures of sampling variability for the most current published estimates of weekly stocks and their net changes. According to a Bloomberg survey of natural gas analysts, estimates of the weekly net change to working natural gas stocks ranged from a net withdrawal of 102 Bcf to 116 Bcf, with a median estimate of 110 Bcf. Working gas in storage was 2,043 Bcf as of Friday, March 6, 2020, according to EIA estimates. This represents a net decrease of 48 Bcf from the previous week. Stocks were 796 Bcf higher than last year at this time and 227 Bcf above the five-year average of 1,816 Bcf. At 2,043 Bcf, total working gas is within the five-year historical range. According to The Desk survey of natural gas analysts, estimates of the weekly net change to working natural gas stocks ranged from a net withdrawal of 45 Bcf to 66 Bcf, with a median estimate of 56 Bcf. Working gas in storage was 3,039 Bcf as of Friday, January 10, 2020, according to EIA estimates. This represents a net decrease of 109 Bcf from the previous week. Stocks were 494 Bcf higher than last year at this time and 149 Bcf above the five-year average of 2,890 Bcf.

The weekly stocks generally are the volumes of working gas as of the report date. Changes in reported stock levels reflect all events affecting working gas in storage, including injections, withdrawals, and reclassifications between base and working gas, including information on estimated measures of sampling variability for the most current published estimates of weekly stocks and their net changes.

Greenhouse gas data, voluntary report- ing, electric power plant emissions. State energy information, including overviews, rankings, data, and analyses. Maps by energy source and topic, includes forecast maps. The Natural Gas Storage Indicator is the U.S. Energy Information Administration's (EIA) estimate of working natural gas volumes held in underground storage facilities at the national and regional The weekly stocks generally are the volumes of working gas as of the report date. Changes in reported stock levels reflect all events affecting working gas in storage, including injections, withdrawals, and reclassifications between base and working gas, including information on estimated measures of sampling variability for the most current published estimates of weekly stocks and their net changes. According to a Bloomberg survey of natural gas analysts, estimates of the weekly net change to working natural gas stocks ranged from a net withdrawal of 102 Bcf to 116 Bcf, with a median estimate of 110 Bcf.

25 Jun 2019 The EIA provides weekly estimates of working gas volumes held in underground storage facilities at the Lower 48 states and five regional 

25 Jun 2019 The EIA provides weekly estimates of working gas volumes held in underground storage facilities at the Lower 48 states and five regional  The Energy Information Administration's (EIA) Natural Gas Storage Change Index is published weekly based on gas volumes available in underground storage 

7 Feb 2010 A discussion of liquefied natural gas (LNG) is beyond the scope of this report. For more information about LNG, please see the EIA report, The 

8 Jan 2016 A map screenshot of underground natural gas storage facilities in Michigan from the U.S. Energy Information Agency. (U.S. EIA). Update: DEQ  19 Aug 2014 The report "Natural Gas Storage Market by Type (Underground, Above According to the EIA report, the global natural gas demand has  15 Apr 2019 Figure 2. Total energy consumed per capita (MWh), 2015 (data from US EIA (201 4)). reusing depleted natural gas reservoirs as a storage vessel in. CAES. abandoned underground storages for CAES has been explored. The EIA-191, Monthly Underground Gas Storage Report,, collects data on total capacity, base gas, working gas, injections, and withdrawals, by reservoir and by storage facility, from all underground natural gas storage operators. Design capacity is calculated as the sum of reported working natural gas capacities of the 380 active storage fields as reported on survey Form EIA-191, Monthly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report, as of November 2018. This metric is a theoretical limit on the total amount of natural gas that can be stored underground and withdrawn for use. -No Data Reported; --= Not Applicable; NA = Not Available; W = Withheld to avoid disclosure of individual company data. Notes: Positive net withdrawals indicate the volume of withdrawals in excess of injections. Negative net withdrawals indicate the volume of injections in excess of withdrawals. Underground Natural Gas Storage by All Operators (Million Cubic Feet) Area: Notes: Change in Working Gas from Same Period, Previous Year, includes data for Alaska which had no working gas recorded for periods prior to January 2013. See Definitions, Sources, and Notes link above for more information on this table.

Underground storage facilities may be reservoirs in depleted oil and gas fields, aquifers, or salt caverns (a more detailed discussion of underground storage concepts is available in the EIA report, The Basics of Underground Natural Gas Storage). EIA designed Form EIA-912, "Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report," to collect weekly

29 Mar 2019 Natural gas design capacity and demonstrated peak capacity both declined slightly in 2018. EIA's two metrics for assessing underground  Underground Natural Gas Storage Capacity. (Capacity in Million Cubic Feet). Area: U.S., Alaska, Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa  The net withdrawal from storage totaled 48 Bcf for the week Working natural gas stocks totaled 2,043 Bcf, which is 227 Bcf more than Source: Form EIA-912 , Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report 

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