Severe winter weather in the United States has a direct and significant impact on European energy markets. The cold snap forced a 50% reduction in US LNG feed gas flows, constricting supply to Europe and helping keep prices elevated near €40 amid its own high demand.

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Even as a massive LNG supply glut promises lower prices, emerging Asian markets lack the physical capacity to absorb it. A severe shortage of regasification terminals, storage, and gas-fired power plants creates a hard ceiling on demand growth, meaning cheap gas alone is not enough to clear the market.

With over half of new global LNG supply coming from the US, an impending oversupply will force US export facilities to operate at significantly lower utilization rates. This transforms the US from a simple high-growth exporter into a flexible, market-balancing swing producer, a role it was not designed for.

The European Union's phase-out of Russian gas is not absolute. Legacy pipeline contracts to Hungary and Slovakia are expected to be exempt. Furthermore, the anticipated loss of Russian LNG supply is projected to be fully absorbed by new global LNG capacity, resulting in a muted impact on prices.

Global natural gas markets are currently disconnected. Extreme cold in Europe is driving prices up nearly 30% and draining historically low storage. Simultaneously, moderate weather in the U.S. and warmer conditions in Asia are keeping prices there subdued, showcasing how localized weather can override global supply trends.

Despite his stated goal of lowering oil prices, President Trump's aggressive sanctions on Venezuela, Iran, and Russia have removed significant supply from the market. This creates logistical bottlenecks and "oil on water" buildups, effectively tightening the market and keeping prices higher than they would be otherwise.

Based on its energy (BTU) equivalent, the price of natural gas has historically been about one-sixth the price of a barrel of oil. Currently, it trades at a much steeper discount (around 1/20th), making it arguably the most undervalued commodity in the last 50 years.

The rise of destination-flexible U.S. LNG is fundamentally altering global gas markets. By acting as the marginal supplier and an effective 'global storage hub,' the U.S. reduces Europe's strategic need for high storage levels, leading to structurally lower prices and a new market equilibrium.

Massive expansion of Russian pipeline capacity, including the Power of Siberia 2, will increase gas flows to China from 38 BCM in 2025 to 106 BCM by 2035. This dramatic increase in secure overland supply is the primary reason why China's demand for seaborne LNG is forecast to peak and then plateau around 2032.

Europe faces a critical conflict between its ambitious net-zero targets and its economic health. High energy costs and a heavy regulatory burden, designed without market realities in mind, are causing companies to close facilities or move investment to the U.S., forcing a difficult reassessment.

In 2013, long before the Ukraine invasion, Putin publicly railed against U.S. shale gas. He presciently saw that it would eventually be exported as LNG, undermining the influence of Russia's state-owned Gazprom and eroding his energy leverage over Europe, a fear that has since been realized.