EIA said in its weekly natural gas storage report, citing shipping data provided by Bloomberg Finance, that 134 Bcf of total LNG-carrying capacity departed US ports, up 16 Bcf from the previous week.
Cheniere’s Sabine Pass plant shipped nine LNG cargoes, and the company’s Corpus Christi facility sent seven shipments during the week ending February 4, according to the report.
Moreover, Venture Global LNG’s Plaquemines terminal and the Freeport LNG facility each sent five shipments, while Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass facility and Sempra Infrastructure’s Cameron LNG terminal each shipped four cargoes during the week under review.
Also, the Cove Point facility sent one cargo during the week under review.
There were no shipments from the Elba Island LNG facility.
Henry Hub down
EIA reported that the Henry Hub spot price fell by $2.59 per million British thermal units (MMBtu), from $9.03/MMBtu last Wednesday to $6.44/MMBtu this Wednesday.
According to the agency, Henry Hub prices fell to an intraweek low of $4.22/MMBtu on Tuesday, before increasing again on Wednesday.
EIA noted that Henry Hub prices decreased by 29 percent over the week, as this week’s warmer temperatures lowered heating demand across much of the country.
The monthly spot price averaged $7.65/MMBtu this January, a $3.40/MMBtu increase compared with December 2025, as extreme cold temperatures late in the month supported elevated prices, it said.
TTF averaged $12.49/MMBtu
EIA said that the price at the Dutch Title Transfer Facility in Europe averaged $12.49/MMBtu, $1.10/MMBtu lower than the previous week.
Moreover, the Japan-Korea Marker price averaged $11.27/MMBtu, unchanged from the previous week.
EIA said the Japan-Korea Marker price reached an intraweek high of $11.53/MMBtu on Friday, the highest price since November 21, 2025, when the price was $11.47/MMBtu.

