Natural Gas Monthly Price - Pakistan Rupee per Million Metric British Thermal Unit

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2016 - Jan 2019: 227.088 (114.09%)
Chart

Description: Natural Gas (U.S.), spot price at Henry Hub, Louisiana

Unit: Pakistan Rupee per Million Metric British Thermal Unit



Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream; The Wall Street Journal; World Bank.

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Natural gas is a gaseous hydrocarbon fuel used for power generation, industrial heat, chemical feedstock, and residential and commercial heating. In commodity markets, it is commonly priced by energy content, with the standard U.S. benchmark being the Henry Hub Natural Gas Spot Price, quoted in U.S. dollars per million British thermal units (MMBtu). One million metric British thermal units is a closely related energy unit used in some market references, but pricing conventions in North American trade are typically expressed per MMBtu. Natural gas is transported through pipelines where available and as liquefied natural gas (LNG) for long-distance seaborne trade.

Its market value reflects both physical delivery constraints and the cost of moving gas from producing basins to consuming centers. Because gas is difficult to store compared with oil, regional pipeline capacity, LNG liquefaction and regasification infrastructure, and seasonal demand swings play an outsized role in pricing. Natural gas also serves as a flexible fuel in electricity systems, where it often competes with coal, fuel oil, nuclear generation, renewables, and imported LNG.

Supply Drivers

Natural gas supply is shaped by geology, infrastructure, and the pace at which wells decline. Major producing regions include North America, Russia, the Middle East, and parts of Central Asia, where large sedimentary basins contain conventional gas or associated gas from oil fields. In North America, shale and tight gas production depends on continuous drilling because individual wells typically decline faster than conventional reservoirs. This creates a strong link between prices, drilling activity, and capital spending.

Weather and seasonality affect supply indirectly through freeze-offs, hurricane disruptions in coastal production areas, and maintenance schedules for pipelines and processing plants. Gas must often be processed to remove liquids, water, and impurities before entering transmission systems, so midstream infrastructure can become a bottleneck even when reservoir output is ample. LNG supply adds another layer of constraint: liquefaction plants, shipping availability, and regasification terminals require large fixed investments and long lead times.

Because storage is limited relative to annual consumption, supply must remain closely matched to demand over short intervals. This makes pipeline congestion, storage injection and withdrawal cycles, and regional basis differentials persistent features of the market.

Demand Drivers

Natural gas demand comes from power generation, industrial combustion, residential and commercial heating, and petrochemical production. In electricity markets, gas is valued for its dispatchability and relatively low emissions of sulfur dioxide, particulates, and carbon dioxide per unit of energy compared with coal and oil. This makes it a common balancing fuel when electricity demand changes quickly or when variable renewable generation needs backup.

Industrial demand is structurally important because gas is both a fuel and a feedstock. It is used to produce ammonia, methanol, hydrogen, and a wide range of chemicals and fertilizers. In these applications, demand depends on manufacturing activity, agricultural input cycles, and the economics of competing feedstocks such as naphtha or coal. Residential and commercial demand is highly seasonal in colder climates because space heating creates strong winter consumption peaks, while cooling demand can also rise in hot-weather regions through gas-fired power generation.

Substitution is a central feature of gas demand. Power generators can switch between natural gas, coal, fuel oil, and in some systems LNG imports, depending on relative prices and plant design. Over longer periods, efficiency gains, electrification, and environmental regulation influence consumption patterns, but the basic role of gas as a flexible heat and power fuel remains persistent.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Natural gas prices are sensitive to the U.S. dollar because the benchmark is dollar-denominated and because international LNG trade is often priced in dollars. A stronger dollar can affect import demand and the competitiveness of U.S. exports in global markets. Interest rates matter through their effect on storage economics, capital spending, and the financing of pipelines, LNG terminals, and drilling programs.

Unlike many metals, natural gas is not usually treated as a broad inflation hedge; its price is driven more by physical balance than by monetary factors. Storage costs and limited storage capacity create pronounced seasonal patterns, with prices often reflecting the value of carrying gas from periods of surplus into periods of peak demand. This can produce contango when storage is abundant and backwardation when immediate supply is tight. Natural gas also tends to correlate with energy-sector equities, industrial activity, and weather-sensitive trading strategies, but the dominant driver remains the balance between deliverable supply and near-term consumption.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2016199.04-
May 2016201.151.06%
Jun 2016269.0333.74%
Jul 2016292.548.74%
Aug 2016292.22-0.11%
Sep 2016310.846.37%
Oct 2016308.96-0.60%
Nov 2016262.03-15.19%
Dec 2016375.3243.24%
Jan 2017341.82-8.93%
Feb 2017295.63-13.51%
Mar 2017303.032.50%
Apr 2017322.956.57%
May 2017327.141.30%
Jun 2017308.35-5.74%
Jul 2017312.631.39%
Aug 2017303.54-2.91%
Sep 2017312.022.79%
Oct 2017301.52-3.36%
Nov 2017315.294.57%
Dec 2017301.01-4.53%
Jan 2018426.7341.76%
Feb 2018295.20-30.82%
Mar 2018302.782.57%
Apr 2018321.386.14%
May 2018323.720.73%
Jun 2018352.298.83%
Jul 2018353.860.45%
Aug 2018367.273.79%
Sep 2018370.260.81%
Oct 2018430.2916.21%
Nov 2018553.0228.52%
Dec 2018552.06-0.17%
Jan 2019426.13-22.81%

Top Companies

Gazprom
Website: http://www.gazprom.com/
Location: Moscow, Russia
Estimated Production: 540 billion cubic meters (BCM) per year

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