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Temperatures have plunged in Texas, causing energy prices to spike
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US oil and natural gas prices rose on Tuesday, as freezing cold weather battered Texas’s energy infrastructure, leaving millions without power.

WTI crude oil was up 0.52% to $59.77 per barrel as of 6.10am ET. That was just off a more than one-year high of more than $60.80 touched on Monday as plunging temperatures hit Texan oil plants.

Natural gas futures were up 5.8% to $3.079 per million British thermal units on Tuesday, trading at around the highest levels since November.

More than 3 million people have been left without power in Texas and close to 5 million around the US as a whole, according to poweroutage.us, as a rare winter storm sweeps the country.

Temperatures fell to 4F (-16C) overnight in Dallas, Texas, and have plunged across Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, Colorado and elsewhere.

It has been challenging for Texas's energy grid, which does not pay generators to keep capacity in reserve. The weather has forced many generators to stop production.

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Wholesale energy prices have skyrocketed, at times above the market cap of $9,000 per megawatt hour, compared to prices of around $25 to $50 per MWh before the winter storms.

The frigid temperatures have hit oil production and natural gas supplies and led to a surge in demand for energy, causing prices to spike.

Heating oil futures - a proxy for diesel - were up 2.58% to $1.817 per gallon on Tuesday morning. Gasoline futures were up 4.11% to $1.7621 a gallon.

Texas is also home to some of the country's biggest oil refineries, as well as the heart of the shale basin. 

Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at currency firm Oanda, said he thought the US oil market had been due a correction after a surge in prices in recent weeks. But he said the current weather situation "will likely continue to offset that."

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"Until the weather moderates in the United States… oil is a 'buy on dips' in the short-term."

Brent crude oil, the international benchmark, was down 0.33% to $63.11 a barrel, still around a one-year high.

JPMorgan last week predicted a commodities "supercycle" would take hold in 2021, as economies reopen and drive up production and demand for energy.

The "roaring 20s" will be accompanied by easy monetary and fiscal policy, a weak US dollar and stronger inflation, all supportive for commodity prices, JPMorgan said.

Read the original article on Business Insider