U.S. natural gas markets are caught between near-term weather-driven lulls and a structural demand boom that the government expects to push power-sector consumption to an all-time high next year.
U.S. natural gas futures edged up 0.6% to settle at $3.265 per million British thermal units Monday, as the market drifted in rangebound trading with no fresh catalyst to break the equilibrium. The Energy Information Administration said it expects natural gas consumption for power generation to set a record in 2027, driven by rising electricity demand, expansion of the gas-fired generating fleet and relatively low fuel prices.
"Near-term weather-driven demand has eased from last week's highs, leaving traders without much new fundamental direction," said Andy Huenefeld, an advisor at Pinebrook Energy Advisors. "Until forecasts show another sustained stretch of major heat, or storage data begins to materially tighten the balance, price action is likely to remain choppy and contained."
The EIA's latest Short-Term Energy Outlook projects average power-sector gas consumption of 38.1 billion cubic feet per day in 2027, up 4% from 2026 levels. The agency forecasts a monthly record of 50.6 Bcf/d in July of next year, reflecting the growing role of gas-fired generation in meeting peak summer air-conditioning demand. The 2026 average is expected to rise 2% from this year.
The structural demand picture extends well beyond seasonal weather patterns. The INGAA Foundation, the research arm of the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America, estimates that the U.S. and Canada will require 25.25 Bcf/d of new natural gas pipeline capacity from 2028 to 2037 to meet projected energy consumption under current policies. That translates to 13,273 miles of new pipelines at a cost of about $162.4 billion, according to the foundation's 2025 North American Midstream Infrastructure Report.
Much of the near- to medium-term demand growth stems from gas-fired power generation to serve data centers. The U.S. Department of Energy projects electricity consumption by data centers will almost triple from current levels to about 800 terawatt-hours per year by 2052. The INGAA report also anticipates $81.6 billion in needed investment for LNG export plants, with exports predicted to triple by 2050 as importing countries displace higher-emissions fuels.
LNG exports represent the single-largest source of incremental gas demand, the INGAA report noted. In a low-carbon scenario, gas pipeline needs drop to 21.04 Bcf/d from the base-case 25.25 Bcf/d, but LNG exports actually rise to 133 Bcf/d from 2030 to 2040, compared with 115.2 Bcf/d in the base case, reflecting increased fuel switching by importing nations.
The broader infrastructure requirement is staggering. The study forecasts that the U.S. and Canada will need more than $1 trillion in new midstream capital investment through 2052, averaging $40 billion to $48 billion per year across natural gas, oil, natural gas liquids, hydrogen and carbon dioxide infrastructure. That includes about 33,800 miles of new natural gas transmission pipelines within the U.S. alone and roughly 103,000 miles of new gathering pipelines to connect upstream production to processing facilities.
"Meeting energy demand is a critical challenge right now, and this report quantifies the necessary midstream infrastructure and corresponding development dollars needed to meet that demand," said Hebe Shaw, executive director of the INGAA Foundation. "Meeting the energy needs of North America will require sustained investment and development, which must begin now."
For now, the market remains in a holding pattern. With near-term weather demand easing and storage data yet to show material tightening, traders are watching for the next sustained heat wave or a shift in the supply-demand balance to provide direction. The EIA's 2027 record consumption forecast offers a bullish long-term narrative, but near-term price action is likely to remain choppy until a catalyst emerges.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.