December 26, 2025 — Natural gas is closing out the week with a familiar end-of-year mood: thinner holiday trading, sharper day-to-day swings, and a market still trying to decide whether winter will be a slow burn or a sudden blaze.
In early Friday pricing, NYMEX natural gas futures were trading around $4.345 per MMBtu, up about 2.4% on the session, with an indicated day range roughly $4.224–$4.382. [1]
Across the Atlantic, Europe’s benchmark Dutch TTF contract was holding near €28.095/MWh in the latest available quote shown by Investing.com (displayed as delayed data with a last date stamp of 24/12), underscoring how holiday calendars and liquidity can matter almost as much as weather models this week. [2]
Why natural gas is moving today
Even when price action looks “simple” (up day / down day), natural gas rarely is. Right now, the market is juggling four overlapping storylines:
1) Demand: winter heating loads vs. “milder” signals
One of the cleanest clues about near-term direction is whether heating demand is ramping fast enough to overwhelm supply. The latest American Gas Association (AGA) market indicators showed total U.S. demand (including exports) fell 11.5% week over week, though it remained 1.2% higher than the same week a year earlier—a mixed picture consistent with a winter that has teased cold but hasn’t delivered it everywhere at once. AGA also noted forecasts pointing to milder patterns (including warmer-than-normal conditions in parts of the country). [3]
That matters because winter doesn’t need to be “record cold” to move gas prices—just cold enough, in the right regions, for long enough, to tighten daily balances.
2) Inventories: strong withdrawals still needed to calm price volatility
Storage is the market’s shock absorber. When storage is comfortable, price spikes tend to fade; when storage gets tight, small surprises become big moves.
The last widely cited U.S. government storage snapshot available online this week showed working gas in storage at 3,579 Bcf as of Friday, Dec. 12, 2025, with a 167 Bcf weekly draw. [4]
With the next set of late-December numbers approaching, traders are leaning hard on expectations. Industry reporting has flagged that EIA data for the week ended Dec. 26 is scheduled for release on Wednesday, Dec. 31—a timing quirk that can amplify short-term volatility as the market trades “ahead of the print.” [5]
3) U.S. hub pricing is still whippy—and that matters for LNG economics
Even before today’s move higher, the market has been living through fast rotations. In EIA’s most recent weekly market update (earlier in December), the agency described a sharp drop in the Henry Hub spot price over the prior week and noted that front-month futures also moved down during that span—illustrating how quickly sentiment can change when weather forecasts shift. [6]
Those swings don’t just affect traders. They feed directly into global LNG competitiveness because the U.S. export model is tightly linked to Henry Hub pricing.
4) Geopolitics and infrastructure risk: energy markets hate uncertainty
Early Friday, Reuters reported that a blaze at Russia’s Azov Sea port of Temryuk—sparked by what local officials described as a Ukrainian drone attack—was extinguished, with fuel reservoirs being cooled. Reuters also noted the port handles liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) among other products. [7]
While that incident is not a direct “natural gas supply outage” headline, it reinforces a broader reality for the entire gas-and-LNG complex: infrastructure risk tends to put a floor under risk premiums, especially when markets are already thin.
The biggest natural gas headlines on Dec. 26, 2025
Beyond price screens, today’s natural gas news flow is being shaped by a set of region-specific stories—each different, but all pointing to the same theme: gas markets are becoming more policy-driven and logistics-constrained.
Australia: gas reform and domestic reservation—ambition meets long contracts
In Australia, the conversation is no longer about whether the east coast gas market needs intervention, but how fast reforms can translate into real supply and pricing outcomes.
A prominent analysis published today highlighted hurdles facing Australia’s push to prioritize domestic supply—particularly the reality that large LNG export contracts extend well into the 2030s, which can delay how quickly reforms bite. The same reporting flagged challenges around bringing on new upstream supply (including debates over regions such as the Beetaloo) and the political complexity of streamlining regulations across jurisdictions. [8]
This follows the Australian government’s own Gas Market Review messaging earlier this week, which recommended significant reforms, including a prospective domestic gas reservation policy, improvements to how gas is bought and sold, and streamlined reporting/governance. [9]
For global gas watchers, Australia matters because it’s a heavyweight LNG exporter. Any structural change that meaningfully shifts domestic vs. export allocation can ripple into LNG spot availability—though, as today’s coverage emphasizes, contract reality can slow the transmission mechanism.
Russia-China pipeline gas: a reminder that trade flows keep shifting
Separate Reuters reporting carried into today’s news cycle said Gazprom supplied 38.8 bcm of gas to China via the Power of Siberia pipeline in 2025, exceeding the annual contractual target of 38 bcm. [10]
The strategic significance: incremental pipeline volumes to Asia can offset some pressures elsewhere in Russia’s gas system—while also reinforcing how Europe and Asia are increasingly distinct pricing and flow theaters in a post-2022 world.
Russia LNG: sanctions continue to reshape long-term supply expectations
Another Reuters item widely recirculating today said Russia has delayed its ambition of producing 100 million tons per year of LNG by several years, citing the effects of Western sanctions on projects and equipment. The report also referenced revised strategy forecasts of 90–105 million tons by 2030 and up to 130 million tons by 2036, alongside discussion of delays at major developments. [11]
For today’s spot pricing, that’s not an “immediate outage” story. But for medium-term LNG balance, it’s highly relevant: when expected supply growth shifts rightward on the calendar, future winter risk premia can reappear.
Vietnam: CNG buses and factories watch 2026 supply and pricing risk
In Vietnam, today’s gas story is less about international geopolitics and more about “will the fuel arrive, and at what price?”
Tuoi Tre News reported that PV GAS D said it would continue supplying natural gas to customers, after concerns circulated that supply for CNG production to a trading company could be halted from January 1, 2026—a disruption that businesses warned could impact hundreds of operations and up to 500 CNG buses in Ho Chi Minh City. The report also described industrial customer concerns about potentially having to shift to LNG at higher cost and noted PV GAS D’s comments about declining domestic reserves, priority for power generation when needed, and expanded import/logistics options to stabilize supply. [12]
This kind of local supply anxiety is an underappreciated driver of long-term gas demand: if end users lose confidence in price stability or continuity, they start planning fuel-switching—even when gas is technically available.
India: new LNG station adds to the downstream buildout story
India’s gas market continues to be defined by infrastructure buildout—especially at the distribution and transportation layer.
Indian Infrastructure reported today that THINK Gas commissioned an LNG station in Rapthadu, Andhra Pradesh, and described the company’s footprint across multiple states and districts under the “Think Gas” brand. [13]
In a global context, these smaller commissioning announcements matter because they are the slow, cumulative mechanism by which LNG import volumes translate into actual end-use demand.
What to watch next
As the calendar flips toward year-end, three near-term catalysts stand out:
- Storage data cadence and expectations: With EIA numbers for the week ended Dec. 26 expected on Dec. 31, the market may remain more reactive to forecast tweaks than usual. [14]
- Weather model convergence (or chaos): If forecasts snap colder across high-consumption regions, gas can reprice quickly; if “milder” guidance holds, rallies tend to struggle for follow-through. [15]
- Policy and supply headlines outside the U.S.: Australia’s domestic reservation debate, Russia’s LNG delays, and Asia’s evolving downstream demand all feed into LNG availability—and LNG availability increasingly feeds back into regional gas pricing. [16]
Natural gas is, as always, a market where physics (weather, molecules, pipelines) meets politics (policy, sanctions, domestic priorities). On December 26, that collision is visible everywhere—from Henry Hub screens to Vietnamese bus depots to Australia’s LNG contract math.
References
1. www.investing.com, 2. www.investing.com, 3. www.aga.org, 4. www.eia.gov, 5. www.naturalgasintel.com, 6. www.eia.gov, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.theaustralian.com.au, 9. www.dcceew.gov.au, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. news.tuoitre.vn, 13. indianinfrastructure.com, 14. www.naturalgasintel.com, 15. www.aga.org, 16. www.dcceew.gov.au

