This month's Horizons report explores one of the biggest shifts facing global energy markets: the end of a decade of cheap US natural gas. Join us for Horizons Live as our expert panel unpacks the key findings and answers your questions.
For more than a decade, Henry Hub prices have remained low and stable, supporting the rapid growth of US LNG exports, affordable gas-fired power generation and the country's position as one of the world's lowest-cost gas producers. Wood Mackenzie believes this era is coming to an end.
This Horizons Live session will bring together our experts to examine the forces reshaping the US gas market, test the key risks to our outlook and explore what a structurally higher Henry Hub price could mean for global energy markets, investment decisions and the pace of the energy transition.
Key themes include:
-
The end of cheap US gas: why structural changes in supply and demand are reshaping the Henry Hub outlook
-
AI, power and LNG demand: how data centres, electrification and export growth are creating a new era of gas consumption
-
Can supply keep pace? The challenges facing US producers as premium acreage depletes and capital discipline persists
-
Global market implications: what higher Henry Hub prices mean for LNG competitiveness, European energy security and Asian gas markets
-
Investment and commercial strategy: how producers, buyers and investors can prepare for a higher-price environment
-
The risks to the outlook: what could accelerate, or slow, the structural shift in US gas prices.
Join us live as our expert panel explores whether the world's most important gas benchmark is entering a new era, and what higher US gas prices could mean for businesses, investors and energy markets worldwide.
Our panel:
-
Gavin Thompson, Vice Chairman, Energy – Europe, Middle East & Africa
-
Nathan Nemeth, Principal Analyst, Global Unconventional Plays
Register now to join the conversation and put your questions to our experts as they unpack one of the defining market shifts shaping the future of global gas.