- December 14th, 2022
European Gas Prices Fall as Cold Blast Forecast to Break in Days
European natural gas prices declined as temperatures are forecast to return to more normal levels within the next few days. ›
European natural gas prices declined as temperatures are forecast to return to more normal levels within the next few days. ›
SINGAPORE, Dec 14 (Reuters) – Oil prices fell on Wednesday after industry data showed a surprise build in U.S. crude inventories against analysts’ forecast of a decline, reinforcing fears about weakening demand even as supply tightens. ›
Oil extended gains on Tuesday as a key pipeline bringing supply to the United States remained shut, adding to concerns about potential tightness in the world’s biggest crude consumer. ›
Oil prices fell on Monday, deepening a multi-week decline, as a weakening global economy offset supply woes stemming from the closure of a key pipeline supplying the United States and Russian threats of a production cut. ›
Eastbound gas flows rose slightly on the Yamal-Europe pipeline to Poland from Germany, while flows of Russian gas through Ukraine into Slovakia were stable, pipeline operator data showed ›
Oil prices bounced higher on Friday as closure of a major Canada-to-U.S. crude pipeline disrupted supplies, but both benchmarks were headed for a weekly loss on worries over slowing global demand growth. ›
European natural gas prices jumped for a third session as a blast of unusually cold weather across the northern half of the continent tests its resilience to a historic energy crisis. ›
Oil prices rebounded on Thursday amid optimism over China’s easing of anti-COVID measures, recouping losses after slumping to the lowest levels so far this year in the previous session. ›
European natural gas prices fluctuated as colder-than-average weather spreads across Europe and sparks jitters over demand. ›
Oil futures were little changed in Asia on Wednesday as hopes of improved Chinese demand offset uncertainty about how a Western cap on Russian oil prices would play out, keeping markets on edge after a sharp fall in the previous session. ›