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Issue 5, September/October 2003
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
U.S. Natural Gas Prices Heat Up
Although
the United States is thought to have plentiful natural gas
resources, the price of gas has more than doubled in the past
year (Chart 1). During 2003 the amount of natural
gas supplied was insufficient to satisfy demand without sharply
higher prices. Futures prices suggest relatively high natural
gas prices will be sustained for the next few years.
In fact, the outlook for natural gas
prices depends on a number of factors. Over the next few years,
the prospects for lower prices depend largely on an unseasonably
cool summer or an unseasonably warm winter. A lack of shutdowns
in offshore production in the Gulf of Mexico during the fall
hurricane season could also soften prices. Over the longer
run, further development of domestic resources, pipelines
and import facilities for liquified natural gas (LNG) are
likely to prove necessary to prevent prices from remaining
high.
A sustained increase in the price of
natural gas can slow the pace of overall U.S. economic activity.
More than 70 percent of natural gas is consumed directly or
indirectly by commercial and industrial establishments. Many
industries, particularly those such as petrochemicals that
rely heavily on natural gas, are adversely affected by higher
natural gas prices.
Inventories and Natural Gas Prices
Sharply rising prices are always
the consequence of demand expanding more than supply or supply
contracting more than demand. In the case of natural gas,
the analysis is complicated by strong seasonal patterns in
consumption and a very mild seasonality in production. U.S.
natural gas consumption is nearly double in January what it
is in May and June. Unusually cold winter weather or unusually
warm summer weather can further accentuate seasonal patterns.
In a market with sharp swings in consumption,
inventories play an important role. In an average year, natural
gas consumption exceeds production and imports in November,
December, January, February and March. During those months,
current production, imports and inventories are typically
used to meet consumption. During the average year, inventories
are built during the months of May, June, July, August, September
and October, when natural gas production and imports typically
exceed consumption.
Consequently, swings in inventories
are one key to understanding movements in natural gas prices.
When inventories fall below normal averages for a given month,
natural gas is seen as relatively more scarce, and its price
rises. When inventories rise above normal averages for a given
month, natural gas is seen as relatively more plentiful, and
its price falls.
Oil Prices and Natural Gas Price Volatility
For some industries and electric
utilities, natural gas and residual fuel oil (a petroleum
product) are good substitutes. These energy users are able
to switch back and forth between these fuels quickly, depending
upon which is cheaper. Rising oil prices push these energy
users toward natural gas, and falling oil prices attract them
back to residual fuel oil. This substitution is commonly known
as intraplant fuel substitution.
Although the number of facilities that
are able to switch from natural gas to residual fuel oil has
declined substantially, changes in the relative prices of
natural gas and crude oil can lead to switching between plants
that use natural gas and those that use oil products in what
is known as interplant fuel switching. Changes in
the relative prices of natural gas and crude oil also lead
to interfirm fuel switching (where the firms producing a given
product change) and interindustry fuel switching (where the
composition of output changes). Consequently, economic research
finds that oil and natural gas prices have tended to track
each other over long periods, and shocks in one of these fuel
markets are quickly transmitted to the other.[1]
Recent Volatility in Natural Gas Prices
In winter 2000–01, two factors
contributed to sharply rising natural gas prices. In the West,
a drought reduced hydroelectric power. Other parts of the
United States had colder than normal winter weather. Both
contributed to a surge in natural gas demand. In the West,
the additional natural gas was used to generate electricity.
Elsewhere, it was used to heat homes and businesses. The surge
in natural gas demand led to a sharp reduction in inventories
(Chart 2). As inventories fell, natural gas prices
skyrocketed—with the spot price reaching nearly $10
per million Btu in December 2000.
In
subsequent months, production was increased, and mild weather
and weakening economic activity contributed to falling natural
gas demand. Inventories were swiftly rebuilt. By December
2001, inventories were at a five-year high. The spot price
of natural gas was just over $2 per million Btu. Throughout
2002, inventories varied seasonally but remained at the high
end of their five-year range.
During 2002, oil prices began to rise.
Oil production was disrupted in Venezuela. Tension in the
Middle East began to escalate. Rising oil prices prompted
a movement away from oil consumption toward natural gas, which
boosted natural gas consumption and pushed natural gas prices
upward—even though inventories remained very high.
During winter 2002–03, continued
gains in oil prices, colder-than-normal weather and a recovering
economy contributed to stronger-than-anticipated gains in
natural gas demand. At about the same time, reports suggest,
natural gas production slipped below expectations. Natural
gas fields that were made economically feasible with newer
technology proved to have sharper decline rates than had been
expected. Although we had approached winter with high natural
gas inventories, they were used quickly and fell to five-year
lows by March 2003. Once again, natural gas prices skyrocketed.
Near-Term Outlook for Natural Gas
Prices
As natural gas prices surged in
late 2002 and 2003, they pulled away from their historical
relationship with oil prices (Chart 3). An old rule
of thumb is that the spot price of natural gas at Henry Hub
(a delivery point in Louisiana) is roughly $1 per million
Btu for each $10 per barrel for the spot-price West Texas
Intermediate crude oil (WTI). A more appropriate pricing rule
makes use of the substitutability between natural gas and
residual fuel oil. Under such a rule, the price of a million
Btu of natural gas at Henry Hub should be about 15 percent
of the per-barrel price of WTI, minus the extra cost of transporting
natural gas to end users. By the latter rule, a price of $32
per barrel of WTI would imply a price of about $4.50 per million
Btu for natural gas at Henry Hub—a little less than
the last price shown on the chart.

Although natural gas prices broke away
only temporarily from oil prices from late 2000 to mid-2001,
the current market outlook is that natural gas prices will
continue to command a premium over their historical relationship
with crude oil. Futures markets for these two fuels show expectations
of a continued decoupling of natural gas and oil prices through
year-end 2005. While the price of WTI is expected to decline
to the low $20s by 2005, natural gas prices are expected to
hover around $5 per million Btu for the next few years. Inventories
are being rebuilt, but they are staying only slightly ahead
of normal seasonal growth and are still below the five-year
average for August.[2]
Over the next few years, the prospects
for substantially lower natural gas prices than are forecast
by the futures market depend largely on the weather. An unseasonably
cool summer or unseasonably warm winter could reduce demand.
A lack of production shutdowns offshore in the Gulf of Mexico
during the fall hurricane season could boost supply. Although
domestic drilling for natural gas responded to higher prices
(Chart 4), increases in domestic production are not
expected to enable significant inventory rebuilding over the
short term. Imports from Canada are constrained by the current
extent of resource development in that country and a lack
of pipeline capacity. Imports of LNG have risen sharply, but
substantial growth is currently limited by a lack of LNG terminal
facilities in the United States.

Longer-Term Outlook for Natural Gas
Prices
Over the longer term, analysts
generally expect natural gas demand to expand more rapidly
than that for other fuel sources (Chart 5).[3] In
comparison with other fuels, natural gas is seen as environmentally
desirable because it burns more cleanly. Without adequate
development of domestic natural gas resources and additional
imports, rising demand will continue to keep natural gas prices
elevated relative to their historical relationship with oil.
Consequently, the decoupling of natural gas and petroleum
prices could persist, even though many analysts believe there
are adequate natural gas resources in place to bring prices
back to about $3.50 per million Btu, which is roughly consistent
with $25 oil.[4]

Some analysts have estimated that significant
quantities of LNG can be imported into the United States at
a domestic price of $2.50 to $4 per million Btu. Some additional
natural gas may be available on public lands in the lower
48 states at market prices of $2.50 to $3.50 per million Btu.
Some analysts estimate that significant quantities of natural
gas from Alaska can be brought to the lower 48 at market prices
of $3.50 to $4 per million Btu. Additional natural gas is
believed to be available in remote areas of northern Canada.
A significant increase of LNG will require
the construction of additional terminal facilities beyond
the current four (in Georgia, Louisiana, Massachusetts and
Maryland) that currently serve the entire United States. Further
development of natural gas resources in the lower 48 will
require better access to public lands and the development
of new pipeline capacity to move the gas from remote locations
to markets. Bringing natural gas to the lower 48 from Alaska
will require construction of a new pipeline. Looking further
ahead, a significant increase in natural gas imports from
Canada will require the exploration and development of remote
fields not yet in use and the construction of new pipelines.
Although increased usage of natural
gas is seen as one way toward a cleaner environment, further
development of natural gas resources is necessary to support
increased usage. Opponents of new development are concerned
about environmental consequences and see energy conservation
as a potential solution to the looming problems in natural
gas markets. A substantial body of research suggests that
such conservation is likely to have economic costs at least
as high as elevated energy prices and probably higher.[5]
Economic Effects of Higher Natural
Gas Prices
Sustained high natural gas prices—forecast
by the futures market and the likely consequence of failing
to develop additional resources—are likely to prove
a drag on U.S. economic activity. Higher energy prices are
indicative of increased scarcity of natural gas, which is
a basic input to production.[6] As such, rising natural gas
prices result in a classic supply-side shock that reduces
potential output. Consequently, output and productivity growth
slow. The decline in productivity growth lessens real wage
growth and increases the unemployment rate at which inflation
accelerates.[7] If market participants expect the near-term
effects on output to be greater than the long-term effects,
they will attempt to smooth their consumption by saving less
or borrowing more, which boosts the interest rate. With slowing
output growth and an increase in the real interest rate, the
demand for real cash balances falls, and for a given rate
of growth in the monetary aggregate, the rate of inflation
increases. Therefore, rising natural gas prices reduce the
growth of gross domestic product (GDP) and boost real interest
rates and the measured rate of inflation.[8]
To my knowledge, no research that has
been through peer review has quantified the effects of rising
natural gas prices on U.S. economic activity. A considerable
body of research has addressed the economic effects of higher
oil prices.[9] That research can be adapted to provide a rough
approximation of the economic effects of rising natural gas
prices.
During previous oil price shocks, natural
gas and oil prices have generally moved together. Prices for
other primary energy sources were relatively unchanged. Consequently,
the measured effects of oil price shocks may represent the
combined effects of both oil and natural gas price movements.
Natural gas accounts for about 40 percent of total oil and
natural gas consumption, so 40 percent of the measured effect
of an oil price shock may be a rough approximation of the
effect of a natural gas price shock by itself. On that basis,
a rough estimate is that a permanent doubling of natural gas
prices would yield a one-time reduction in U.S. GDP by 0.6
to 2.1 percent below what it would otherwise be.[10] The increase
in the GDP deflator would be about the same. The effects would
be fully realized over two to three years.
Several factors suggest the rough estimate
may be a little high. A reduced energy-to-GDP ratio may have
made the economy less sensitive to energy price shocks. Because
U.S. natural gas prices are determined primarily in a North
American market rather than world markets, high U.S. prices
are unlikely to slow economic activity outside North America,
which would lessen the effects on the U.S. economy. In addition,
rising oil prices result in substantial income transfers from
the United States to oil-exporting nations, but rising natural
gas prices do not result in similar transfers because most
of the natural gas consumed in the United States is produced
domestically. The smaller transfers associated with rising
natural gas prices have a theoretically interesting, but quantitatively
small, effect in lessening the overall economic effects of
higher energy prices.
In contrast, the heavy use of natural
gas in the industrial and commercial sectors may make the
economy more sensitive to natural gas price movements than
oil price movements. On balance, a more refined estimate is
that a permanent doubling of natural gas prices would result
in a one-time reduction of U.S. GDP by 0.5 to 1.8 percent
below what it would otherwise be. The increase in the GDP
deflator would be about the same. The effects would be fully
realized in about two to three years.
The economic effects of higher natural
gas prices are likely to be uneven across industries and regions
of the country.[11] States with extensive natural gas fields
will benefit from rising natural gas prices, while states
with industries that use natural gas extensively will be hurt.
Among the domestic industries most adversely affected by rising
natural gas prices are fertilizer producers, the petrochemical
industry, electric utilities, aluminum producers and the users
of these goods and services.[12]
Conclusion
Natural gas prices rose sharply
during 2003, pulling away from their historical relationship
with crude oil prices. Domestic natural gas production and
imports failed to keep pace with consumption, and inventories
fell sharply. Higher natural gas prices seem likely to be
sustained through the next few years unless we have mild weather.
With expectations that natural gas consumption will increase
faster than that of other fuels over the next 20 years, development
of additional natural gas resources, pipelines and LNG terminals
is likely to prove necessary to return natural gas prices
to their historical relationship with crude oil prices.
If sustained indefinitely, elevated
natural gas prices will act as a drag on U.S. economic activity
over the next few years. A permanent doubling of natural gas
prices could reduce U.S. GDP by 0.5 to 1.8 percent below what
it would otherwise be. The increase in the price level would
be roughly the same. These economic effects would be uneven
across industries and regions of the country and take two
to three years to be fully realized.
—Stephen P. A. Brown
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| About the Author
Brown is director of energy
economics and microeconomic policy analysis in
the Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- See Yücel and Guo (1994) and Brown and
Yücel (2003).
- Natural gas inventories have remained below
the five-year seasonal average for each month
since March 2003.
- For example, see the U.S. Energy Information
Administration’s Annual Energy Outlook
2003.
- Although the imposition of price controls
for natural gas could keep natural gas prices
in line with those of oil, such controls would
exacerbate the shortage rather than alleviate
it. See Brown (1985) and Brown and Yücel
(1993).
- See Brown (1998), Schipper (1998) and Sutherland
(1994, 1998 and 2000).
- See Brown and Yücel (2002).
- Reduced productivity would reduce profits
and expected future profits, which would reduce
stock prices and wealth.
- See Brown and Yücel (2002).
- For surveys on the research about the aggregate
economic response to oil price shocks, see Brown
and Yücel (2002) and Brown, Yücel
and Thompson (forthcoming).
- A 1987 Energy Modeling Forum study (Hickman,
Huntington and Sweeney 1987) that incorporated
the work of many researchers estimated the elasticity
of the response to the U.S. economy to an oil
price shock as –0.02 to –0.076.
Brown and Yücel (1995) find it likely that
the response to an oil price shock has declined
since the 1980s.
- See Brown and Yücel (1995).
- Natural gas is the principal feedstock for
ammonia-based fertilizers. Foreign producers
with access to lower-priced natural gas gain
a competitive advantage when U.S. natural gas
prices rise. Natural gas is also the principal
feedstock for the U.S. petrochemical industry,
while foreign competitors primarily use petroleum
as their feedstock. When U.S. natural gas prices
rise relative to the oil price, domestic petrochemical
producers are placed at a competitive disadvantage.
Natural gas is one of many fuels that are used
to generate electricity, but it is the fuel
of choice for most peaking facilities—that
is, facilities that meet transitory spikes in
electricity demand. Consequently, high natural
gas prices can raise costs for an electric utility
and its customers. Aluminum production uses
considerable energy both directly and through
the consumption of electricity. The industry
generates some of its own electricity with natural
gas. Combined, these factors make the aluminum
industry relatively sensitive to natural gas
and electricity prices.
References
Brown, Stephen P. A. (1985),
“Consumers May Not Benefit from Wellhead
Price Controls on Natural Gas,” Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
July, 1–11.
——— (1998),
“Global Warming Policy: Some Economic Implications,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
Fourth Quarter, 26–35.
Brown, Stephen P. A., and
Mine K. Yücel (1993), “The Pricing
of Natural Gas in U.S. Markets,” Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
Second Quarter, 41–51.
———(1995),
“Energy Prices and State Economic Performance,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
Second Quarter, 13–23.
———(2002),
“Energy Prices and Aggregate Economic Activity:
An Interpretative Survey,” Quarterly
Review of Economics and Finance 42(2): 193–208.
——— (2003),
“Have Oil and Natural Gas Prices Decoupled?”
Presentation to a meeting of the Energy Modeling
Forum, College Park, Md. (July).
Brown, Stephen P. A., Mine
K. Yücel and John Thompson (forthcoming),
“Business Cycles: The Role of Energy Prices,”
in Cutler J. Cleveland, ed., Encyclopedia
of Energy (Academic Press).
Energy Information Administration
(2003), U.S. Department of Energy, Annual Energy
Outlook 2003, http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/aeo/index.html.
Hickman, Bert G., Hillard
G. Huntington and James L. Sweeney, eds. (1987),
The Macroeconomic Impacts of Energy Shocks
(Amsterdam: Elsevier Science Publishers,
B.V., North-Holland).
Schipper, Lee (1998), “The
Road from Kyoto: The Evolution of Carbon Dioxide
Emissions from Energy Use in IEA Countries,”
International Energy Agency, Paris, paper presented
at the 21st Annual International Conference of
the International Association for Energy Economics,
Quebec, Canada (May).
Sutherland, Ronald J. (1994),
“Energy Efficiency or the Efficient Use
of Energy Resources,” Energy Sources
16: 257–68.
——— (1998),
“A Critique of the ‘Five-Lab’
Study,” American Petroleum Institute Discussion
Paper (June).
——— (2000),
“‘No Cost’ Efforts to Reduce
Carbon Emissions in the U.S.: An Economic Perspective,”
The Energy Journal 21(3): 89–112.
Yücel, Mine K., and
Shengyi Guo (1994), “Fuel Taxes and Cointegration
of Energy Prices,” Contemporary Economic
Policy (July).
About Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
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