LNG growth anticipated and increasing amounts will come from eastern US while the Permian Basin production will decline

 

projected natural gas flows by region

Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2025 (AEO2025)
New predictions from analysts at the U.S. Energy Information Administration suggests there will be a decline in natural gas production in the Permian Basin and the nation’s Gulf Coast will lean more heavily on East Coast gas production for its LNG manufacturing.

In the Annual Energy Outlook 2025 (AEO2025) of the EIA, it projects regional differences in natural gas markets will encourage increased natural gas flows from the mid-Atlantic to the southern Gulf Coast in the coming decades.

Across the cases explored, it predicts production from the Appalachian Basin in the mid-Atlantic and Ohio region will increasingly meet growing demand on the Gulf Coast in the South Central region, driven largely by increasing liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports. The economics of increased production in the Appalachian Basin are more favorable by 2030, and the model shows natural gas transiting through the Eastern Midwest region on the way to the Gulf Coast.

In its report, the EIA froze assumptions for AEO2025 in December 2024, and did not include market changes, recently passed legislation, regulations, executive actions, or court rulings after that date.

U.S. natural gas demand growth is driven by LNG exports from the Gulf Coast

projected U.S. natural gas consumption and exports

Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2025 (AEO2025)

Nearly all existing U.S. LNG export capacity is on the U.S. Gulf Coast, and all new capacity built in AEO2025 is on the Gulf Coast in Texas and Louisiana. The EIA projected natural gas converted to LNG for export will increase to 9.8 trillion cubic feet (Tcf), or almost 27 billion cubic feet per day, in 2037 in its Reference case compared with 4.4 Tcf in 2024. Of this new capacity, the EIA assumed the five LNG export projects already under construction enter service by 2028 and account for almost 60% of the projected growth. The remaining 40% results from additional LNG export capacity the model projects will be economical to build later in the projection period. After the mid-2030s, the agency expect exports to remain essentially flat through 2050.

Natural gas production growth is concentrated in the eastern Appalachian Basin

projected natural gas production by region

Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2025 (AEO2025)

The EIA also projects natural gas production in the East region, where the Appalachian Basin is located, will increase across almost all our cases. For the Reference case, this volume grows from 12.6 Tcf in 2024 to over 19.6 Tcf by 2050. The Appalachian Basin contains the most abundant and economical-to-access natural gas resources in the United States.

In contrast, production in regions closest to the Gulf Coast decreases over the projection period. In the Reference case, natural gas production decreases by a combined 3.3 Tcf in 2050 compared with 2024 in:

  • The Southwest region, home to the Permian Basin and associated plays
  • The Gulf Coast region, home to the Haynesville and Eagle Ford plays
  • The Offshore Gulf of America

Declining natural gas production can be attributed to several play-specific factors. Natural gas production from the Permian Basin is largely a byproduct of crude oil drilling activities. The EIA  projects it will decrease as crude oil production declines. The Haynesville formation is much deeper than other natural gas formations, making it more expensive to drill. Its proximity to LNG export terminals has led to drilling and infrastructure investments that result in natural gas production increases midway through the projection period. Projects in the Offshore Gulf of America tend to be more capital-intensive and require longer lead times than onshore projects. Natural gas production has decreased over the last decade, a trend we project will continue.

projected annual average natural gas prices at selected hubs

Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2025 (AEO2025)

Most U.S. natural gas market hubs are priced relative to the Henry Hub in southern Louisiana, the national benchmark price used both in futures contracts and to price U.S. LNG exports overseas. Regional differences in natural gas prices relative to Henry Hub reflect local supply-demand dynamics, and they indicate incentives to transport natural gas from low-price to high-price markets.

In the AEO2025 Reference case, the Henry Hub natural gas spot price increases to $4.80 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) in 2050, denominated in 2024 dollars, compared with $2.19/MMBtu in 2024. In 2024, natural gas prices averaged $0.75/MMBtu more on the Gulf Coast than in the East region, indicating that resources in the East are more economical to produce even when including the costs to transport natural gas to consumers in Texas and Louisiana on the Gulf Coast.

The EIA also projects this regional price differential will persist and widen across the AEO2025 cases, increasing to more than $2.00/MMBtu by 2050 in the Reference case. This gap encourages infrastructure builds, such as pipelines, that facilitate increased natural gas flows out of the East and to the Gulf Coast.

The AEO2025 was released on April 15, 2025, and reflects laws and regulations as of December 2024. Previous Today in Energy articles for the AEO2025 presented key findings for energy consumptionhydrocarbon production and exports, and data centers.