By Scott DiSavino
(Reuters) -A massive winter storm moving across the eastern half of the U.S. on Tuesday knocked out power to over 636,000 homes and businesses in 12 states ahead of a brutal freeze expected to blanket the region starting this weekend.
The hardest hit states so far were North Carolina with around 170,000 power outages, Pennsylvania with over 106,000 outages and New York with about 67,000 outages, according to data from PowerOutage.us.
The biggest power companies in those states are units of Duke Energy (NYSE:) in North Carolina, First Energy in Pennsylvania, and Con Edison in New York.
Extreme weather is a reminder of the February freeze in 2021 that left millions in Texas and other U.S. Central states without power, water and heat for days, and a winter storm in December 2022 – known as Elliott in the energy industry – that almost caused the collapse of power and systems in parts of the eastern half of the country.
The current storm is covering most of the country east of the Mississippi River, according to AccuWeather.com. It is moving toward the U.S. Northeast.
The storm is coming ahead of what will likely be the nation’s coldest weather since December 2022, according to data from financial firm LSEG.
LSEG projected gas demand, used to heat about half the homes in the country, would reach a daily record of 170.0 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) on Jan. 15 and 173.7 bcfd on Jan. 16.
Traders noted it would be unusual for gas use to hit a record on Jan. 15 since it is the U.S. Martin Luther King Day holiday when many businesses and government offices will be shut for a long weekend.
If correct, gas demand, including exports, on Jan. 15 and 16 would top the current daily record of 162.5 bcfd set on Dec. 23, 2022, according to federal energy data from S&P Global Commodities Insights.
One billion cubic feet is enough gas to fuel about 5 million U.S. homes for a day.
Despite the coming cold, spot power and gas prices have not reacted much to the current storm, but gas futures have soared about 30% over the past six days and were trading at a two-month high of around $3.25 per million British thermal units. [NGA/]
DECEMBER 2022 STORM
The December 2022 storm caused some energy companies, including the Tennessee Valley Authority and Duke, to impose rotating outages to maintain electric reliability after dozens of power plants failed to operate.
Gas flows into pipelines were also reduced during that storm, as output declined due in part to the freezing of gas wells, pipes and other equipment. At the same time, demand for gas for heating and power generation soared, dramatically lowering line pressures.
In New York City, Consolidated Edison (NYSE:) was forced to declare an emergency because it faced a gas system collapse that would have taken “many months” to restore service in the middle of the winter.
This story originally appeared on Investing