
America sits on a mountain of natural gas. The Permian Basin pumps out more than pipelines or export terminals can handle. Producers there pay buyers to take it away. Negative prices, a record low. And yet, across oceans, war has triggered blackouts in Asia and Africa. Europe braces for winter shortages.
The contrast stems from conflict in Iran. That war chokes supplies through the Strait of Hormuz. Global LNG markets tighten. U.S. benchmark futures dipped 10% since the fighting started. European futures leaped 40%. Asian ones more than 50%. Yahoo Finance captured this divide in late April.
Chris Louney, director of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, put it bluntly: “US gas prices have not just remained lower than global benchmarks, but have remained insulated from the volatility” of major global gas and import markets in Europe and Asia. “This comparative energy security is beneficial for domestic industry that relies on natural gas as a feedstock or form of industrial grade heat, and increasingly power-hungry industries such as AI and data centers.”
New pipelines this year will ease the Permian pinch. Gas will flow better to coasts and LNG plants. But the surplus already fortifies U.S. factories. Manufacturers thrive on cheap fuel. Data centers expand without imported energy shocks.
War’s Global Ripple Hits Hard
Shut down the Strait of Hormuz. Qatar’s exports stall. Global supply drops 20%. LNG prices in Europe climb 35%, Asia 51% in late April, per the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Rationing spreads. Blackouts follow.
U.S. LNG breaks records anyway. March exports hit all-time highs as plants ran over capacity. Golden Pass and Cheniere expansions kicked in. Europe took 64% of the total, 7.49 million tons. Asia doubled its take to 1.99 million tons on higher prices. Reuters tracked the surge April 2.
Ukraine ramps up too. Naftogaz expects 35 Bcf of U.S. LNG in 2026. First cargoes arrived via Germany and Poland amid Russian strikes on its infrastructure. Natural Gas Intelligence reported this in February.
Europe’s shift accelerates. U.S. supplied 54% of EU LNG by mid-2025. Now it’s over 60% in spots like January 2026. Russia down to 13%. Long-term contracts lock in more. A July 2025 U.S.-EU deal eyes $750 billion in LNG, oil, nuclear through 2028. RealClearEnergy warned of regulatory hesitations, but approvals flow now.
And the Ukraine war lingers. Russian pipeline gas slashed. U.S. cargoes filled the gap since 2022, surging from 18.9 bcm to 55 bcm that year. Europe imports record LNG in 2026 to refill stocks and aid Ukraine. 10/12 Industry Report noted the pivot January 24.
Dependency grows. UK takes 90% U.S. gas. Projections hit 80% EU LNG from America by 2030, 40% of total gas. Contracts shift to U.S. frameworks, away from old Russian models. Brussels Signal flagged risks February 6.
LNG Boom Reshapes Power Balance
U.S. dominates. World’s top LNG exporter at 15 Bcf/d, passing Qatar and Australia. Exports grew from zero a decade ago. Supply created demand—power plants built, networks expanded. Forbes marked the shift February 24.
Trump’s team pushes harder. Energy Secretary Chris Wright announced over 19 Bcf/d new export approvals—more than total capacity at inauguration. DOE greenlit Kinder Morgan’s Elba Island boost by 22%, to 433 MMcf/d. Natural Gas Intelligence eyed 17 Bcf/d exports in 2026, up from 2025’s record.
Europe benefits, sort of. Prices may halve by 2030 on new U.S., Qatar supply. Industries save $46 billion yearly. But U.S. domestic prices climb to $4.90/MMBtu by 2030-2035, narrowing the edge. OilPrice.com analyzed February 8.
Geopolitics twists. FOB contracts let buyers steer cargoes to highest bids. Asia pulls more at $21.65/mmBtu vs. Europe’s $16.17. Southeast Europe eyes growth via new deals, infrastructure. Natural Gas Intelligence, April 30.
Challenges loom. Terminals near max. Summer heat could spike domestic demand. Iran war lingers—costs hit $25 billion for U.S., per Pentagon. Gas prices touched $4.18/gallon. Sherwood News, late April.
America exports energy security. Europe trades Russian pipelines for U.S. tankers. Ukraine gets winter heat. Asia chases spot deals. The Permian glut? It powers AI servers and factories back home. War rages. Supplies strain. U.S. gas flows on.
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