Supporting Statement A

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Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package

OMB: 1905-0175

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Supporting Statement for Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package

Part A: Justification

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January 2018



Form EIA-176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition

Form EIA-191, Monthly and Annual Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

Form EIA-757, Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey

Form EIA-857, Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers

Form EIA-910, Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey

Form EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

OMB No. 1905-0175

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U.S. Department of Energy

Washington, DC 20585

Independent Statistics & Analysis

www.eia.gov

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INTRODUCTION

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) is the statistical and analytical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). It collects, analyzes, and disseminates independent and impartial energy information to promote sound policymaking, efficient markets, and public understanding regarding energy and its interaction with the economy and the environment.


The Natural Gas Data Collection Program includes the following surveys:

EIA‑176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition,

EIA‑191, Monthly and Annual Underground Natural Gas Storage Report,

EIA-757, Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey,

EIA‑857, Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers,

EIA-910, Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey, and

EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report.


EIA requests a three-year extension of collection authority for each of the surveys referenced in the Natural Gas Data Collection Program with changes to Forms EIA-176, EIA-191, EIA-912 and EIA-757, with minor changes in the instructions to all survey forms to improve clarity.



Figure 1- Background of the Natural Gas Data Collection Package

The data collected under the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package is used to determine the amount of natural gas stored and consumed in the United States. EIA evaluates the lifecycle of natural gas from its reserves and production to consumption and prices throughout the upstream and downstream market. The data collected by the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package surveys are among those that are required to address the status and future of the role of natural gas in the energy mix and overall economy. Among the data series resulting from the information collected in these surveys is the rate, location and source of natural gas produced and entering the market, the quantities being stored and the location of the storage, and the quantities being delivered to various consuming sectors. Form EIA-176, “Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition,” is an annual survey that collects data on the origin of natural gas supplies and the disposition of natural gas.. Monthly natural gas surveys (Forms EIA-191, EIA-857, and EIA-910) collect data on underground storage, purchases and deliveries of natural gas to consumers, and sales from marketers. Form EIA-912, “Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report,” is a weekly survey that collects information on natural gas inventories held in underground storage facilities in the Lower 48 states. Form EIA-757, “Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey,” is a triennial survey of natural gas processing plants. This survey collects information on midstream natural gas processing infrastructure such as capacity, status, and operations of natural gas processing plants. Schedule B of Form EIA-757 may be activated during an energy emergency to provide real-time data in the event of a supply disruption due to a natural disaster. These data are publicly released in the following publications:

CHANGES TO NATURAL GAS DATA COLLECTION

The Natural Gas Data Collection Program contains the following changes:

Form EIA-176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition

  • Discontinuation of collection of costs associated with purchase gas received within the service area in Part 4 Item 4.1. EIA has the capability to approximate values for this activity using monthly data. EIA is deleting this data element to reduce respondent burden.

  • Discontinue collecting the year-end natural gas pump price for natural gas sold directly to the public at a fueling station that is currently shown in Part 3 Item B.3 of the survey form. EIA has determined that this question had large variance in data quality and inconsistent reporting methodology, and will investigate use of vehicle fuel prices from external sources.

  • Addition of a question in Part 3 of the survey asking respondents if they have an alternative-fueled vehicle fleet, and if so, what kind and how many vehicles comprise the fleet. The information improves survey frame coverage and data accuracy of Form EIA-886, Annual Survey of Alternative Fueled Vehicles.

  • Addition of a question in Part 3 of the survey form asking respondents for the names and zip codes of any aboveground liquefied natural gas (LNG) storage facilities that are owned by, operated by, or provide services to survey respondents. EIA is collecting this information to facilitate collection of LNG data by providing a list of operators and their locations.

  • Addition of a question in Part 3 asking local distribution companies to provide all counties in their distribution territory where they deliver end-use natural gas. This information enables EIA to estimate the service territory for a local distribution company. Additionally, this information will allow EIA analysts and data customers to understand service territories associated with natural gas distributors. EIA has received inquiries for this information in the past.

  • Reconfiguration of Part 6b Line 12.4 sub-item 9096, “Other Natural gas consumed in your operations: Vaporization/LNG Fuel,” making it a standalone item on Line 12.4, titled “Vaporization/Liquefaction/LNG Fuel,” the subsequent deletion of current Line 12.4 sub-item 9096, and the relabeling of current Line 12.4 as new Line 12.6. In the past, many respondents have missed reporting this data element. The changes are designed to improve the coverage and accuracy by respondents in reporting this information and will assist EIA in its modeling and analysis.

  • Addition of a question in Part 6b Line 12.5 asking companies to report company use of a natural gas-fired vehicle fleet. During cognitive testing, companies expressed confusion as to where to report these volumes, so EIA is making it its own data line item.

Form EIA-191, Monthly Underground Gas Storage Report

  • Removal of “Other” as an option under “type of facility” question in Part 3 of the survey form. Respondents have not used this category to classify categorized their facilities as “Other.” This facility classification category data does not provide the intended utility for EIA, so EIA will delete it to reduce reporting burden.





Form EIA-757, Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey

  • Collection of Form EIA-757 Schedule A data for new natural gas processing plants that open and begin operations between the three-year data collection cycles. This minor protocol change allows EIA to maintain a current frame at all times rather than updating the survey frame every three years when a new data collection cycle begins.

  • Collection of Form EIA-757 Schedule A processing throughput capacity on an annual basis. This will allow EIA to track recent changes in natural gas processing plant capacities, a key piece of information for Form EIA-757 Schedule B Emergency Activation portion of the survey.



Form EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

  • Divide “South Central” reporting region into “South Central Salt” and “South Central Nonsalt.” Currently, operators with more than 15 billion cubic feet (Bcf) storage capacity report volumes between salt and non-salt facilities separately. The change would require all operators in the reporting sample to report separate volumes for salt and non-salt facilities. This would make published figures more accurate. For example, under the current methodology, volumes reported by a respondent with majority salt storage would be allocated entirely to the “South Central Salt” region, even if nearly half of their volumes were nonsalt. Operators with more than 15 Bcf of storage capacity in the South Central region are currently asked to attribute volumes between Salt and Nonsalt, but this change would ask all operators to report in this way.



A.1. Legal Justification

Legal Authority

The authority for these data collections is provided by the following provisions:

15 U.S.C. §772 outlines the types of individuals subject to the information collection authority delegated to the [Secretary] and the general parameters of the type of data which can be required. 15 U.S.C. §772(b) states:

All persons owning or operating facilities or business premises who are engaged in any phase of energy supply or major energy consumption shall make available to the [Secretary] such information and periodic reports, records, documents, and other data relating to the purposes of this Act, including full identification of all data and projections as to source, time, and methodology of development, as the [Secretary] may prescribe by regulation or order as necessary or appropriate for the exercise of functions under the Act.”

15 U.S.C. §764(b), states that to the extent authorized by 15 U.S.C. §764(a), the Administrator shall;

(1) advise the President and the Congress with respect to the establishment of a comprehensive national energy policy in relation to the energy matters for which the Administration has responsibility, and, in coordination with the Secretary of State, the integration of domestic and foreign policies relating to energy resource management;

(2) assess the adequacy of energy resources to meet demands in the immediate and longer range future for all sectors of the economy and for the general public;

(3) develop effective arrangements for the participation of State and local governments in the resolution of energy problems;

(4) develop plans and programs for dealing with energy production shortages;

(5) promote stability in energy prices to the consumer, promote free and open competition in all aspects of the energy field, prevent unreasonable profits within the various segments of the energy industry, and promote free enterprise;

(6) assure that energy programs are designed and implemented in a fair and efficient manner so as to minimize hardship and inequity while assuring that the priority needs of the Nation are met;

(9) collect, evaluate, assemble, and analyze energy information on reserves, production, demand, and related economic data;

(12) perform such other functions as may be prescribed by law.”

As the authority for invoking 15 U.S.C. §764(b), above, 15 U.S.C. §764(a) states:

Subject to the provisions and procedures set forth in this Act, the [Secretary] shall be responsible for such actions as are taken to assure that adequate provision is made to meet the energy needs of the Nation. To that end, he shall make such plans and direct and conduct such programs related to the production, conservation, use, control, distribution, rationing, and allocation of all forms of energy as are appropriate in connection with only those authorities or functions-

(1) specifically transferred to or vested in him by or pursuant to this chapter;

(3) otherwise specifically vested in the Administrator by the Congress.”

Additional authority for this information collection is provided by 15 U.S.C. §790(a) which states;

It shall be the duty of the Director to establish a National Energy Information System ... [which] shall contain such information as is required to provide a description of and facilitate analysis of energy supply and consumption within and affecting the United States on the basis of such geographic areas and economic sectors as may be appropriate to meet adequately the needs of –

(1) the Department of Energy in carrying out its lawful functions;

(2) the Congress;

(3) other officers and employees of the United States in whom have been vested, or to whom have been delegated energy-related policy decision-making responsibilities; and

(4) the States to the extent required by the Natural Gas Act [15 U.S.C. 717 et. seq.] and the Federal Power Act [16 U.S.C. 791a et. seq.].

(b) At a minimum, the System shall contain such energy information as is necessary to carry out the Administration's statistical and forecasting activities, and shall include… such energy information as is required to define and permit analysis of;

(1) the institutional structure of the energy supply system including patterns of ownership and control of mineral fuel and nonmineral energy resources and the production, distribution, and marketing of mineral fuels and electricity;

(2) the consumption of mineral fuels, nonmineral energy resources, and electricity by such classes, sectors, and regions as may be appropriate for the purposes of this chapter;

(5) industrial, labor, and regional impacts of changes and patterns of energy supply and consumption;

(6) international aspects, economic and otherwise, of the evolving energy situation; and

(7) long-term relationships between energy supply and consumption in the United States and world communities.”

A.2. Needs and Uses of Data

The purpose of the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package is to collect basic and detailed data on natural gas production, distribution, and consumption to meet EIA’s mandates and energy data users’ needs. Adequate evaluation of the natural gas industry requires collection and processing of data related to natural gas production, processing, transmission, distribution, storage, marketing, and consumption.

  1. The data that EIA collects are used to address significant energy industry issues. In line with its mandated responsibility to collect data that adequately describe the natural gas marketplace, EIA evaluates the lifecycle of natural gas from its reserves and production to consumption and prices throughout the upstream and downstream market. The data collected by the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package surveys are among those that are required to address the status and future of the role of natural gas in the energy mix and overall economy. Among the data series resulting from the information collected in these surveys are the quantities stored and the location of the storage, locations and capabilities of natural gas processing, and quantities delivered to various consuming sectors by state. Prices are also reported at the end distribution stream by location and sector.


  1. EIA must collect some data at the state level. Congressional and state Agency users have historically emphasized their need for such data. EIA’s collection of these data is consistent with its mandated responsibilities to collect specific product information for appropriate geographic areas and economic sectors, to act as a central clearinghouse, and to disseminate relevant information to the states. At the same time, EIA is committed to operate its data collections in a manner that will minimize the industry’s reporting burden to the extent possible.


  1. Timely data are essential to policy makers and industry planners who make decisions affecting all aspects of the natural gas industry. Consultants, investors, and financial actors all rely on EIA data for accurate, current information on the energy sector, promoting sound decision-making and efficient markets.


  1. Alternative data sources do not adequately satisfy the needs of the EIA and its user communities. Accurate, meaningful, and independent price, supply and demand statistics are essential to describe and measure phenomena in the marketplace. It is necessary that this information be collected by an unbiased, independent source, if the data are to be credible.

The data collected by EIA on these forms are unique. While similar data may be available from private and/or industry sources, as well as from other Federal agencies, such data are not reasonable alternatives for the comprehensive data provided by the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package survey forms.

Data from the forms in the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package are published in the Annual Energy Outlook, Natural Gas Annual, Natural Gas Monthly, Natural Gas Weekly Update, Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report, Monthly Energy Review, Short‑Term Energy Outlook, State Energy Portal, and numerous other EIA products.

The following table identifies recurring EIA publications which use data from each of the surveys in the Natural Gas Downstream Team (NGDT). The data are critical to the AEO, MER, and STEO. Critical means that the publication could not occur without this information or the publication can continue to be released in the short-term with the survey data missing, imputed, or modeled, but would be of reduced value to data customers.


Survey No.


Other recurring EIA Publications

EIA-191

Monthly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

Natural Gas Monthly, Natural Gas Annual, Natural Gas Annual Respondent Query System, U.S. Energy Mapping System, State Energy Portal

EIA-912

Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report, Natural Gas Weekly Update

EIA-857

Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers

Natural Gas Monthly, Natural Gas Annual

EIA-910

Monthly Natural Gas Marketers Survey

Natural Gas Monthly, Natural Gas Annual

EIA-176

Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition

Natural Gas Monthly , Natural Gas Annual, Natural Gas Annual Respondent Query System, State Energy Portal

EIA-757

Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey

Natural Gas Annual, Natural Gas Annual Respondent Query System, State Energy Portal, Respondent Query System, U.S. Energy Mapping System

EIA’s natural gas data are published in papers, trade journals, and technical reports as well as cited and republished in reports by consulting firms, financial institutions, and numerous other entities. A number of state agencies republish EIA data in reports to the public. Major media publications use or republish EIA reports and data include but are not limited to: The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, NPR, The Economist, Financial Times, ABC News, CNBC, Fox Business, The Guardian, CNN Money, Forbes, USA Today, Bloomberg, Reuters, Associated Press, Platts, Marketwatch, The Washington Examiner, New York Daily News, UPI, as well as energy trade press publications and hundreds of smaller-scale and local publications.

A.2 Description of Individual Surveys in EIA’s Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package

A.2.1 Form EIA‑176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition

Natural gas supply and disposition data collection was initiated in 1910 and was conducted as a voluntary annual natural gas supply and disposition survey by the Department of Interior, Bureau of Mines (BOM) until 1977. With the establishment of the Department of Energy (DOE) in 1977, responsibility for the survey was transferred to EIA within DOE. The voluntary survey was continued through 1979 by EIA using the BOM Forms 6‑1340‑A, “Supply and Disposition of Natural Gas,” for non‑producing distribution companies and 6‑1341‑A, Supply and Disposition of Natural Gas, for all other respondents. EIA received approval to continue the survey using a slightly‑modified mandatory survey Form EIA‑176, “Supply and Disposition of Natural Gas,” for report years 1980 and 1981. Approvals of the use of a substantially‑revised form were granted for report years 1982 through 1986, and for the use of the form with minor revisions for report years 1987 through 2001. In 2002, EIA requested and received approval to revise Form EIA-176 to collect data on natural gas deliveries to nonutility generators of electricity. In 2008, EIA requested and received approval to collect revenue data gathered from the deliveries of gas delivered on behalf of third-parties. In 2012, EIA requested and received approval for the collection of information on service territory changes and participation in customer choice programs. In 2015, EIA requested and received approval for collection of: information on the price of compressed natural gas sold to the public as vehicle fuel; costs associated with natural gas purchased and received at the city gate (to be discontinued in the 2018 clearance cycle); and liquefied natural gas storage capacity.

Form EIA‑176 enables EIA to develop gas supply and disposition balances and relevant cost, price, and related information at the state level by combing and merging data collected on Form EIA-176 with other natural gas data gathered via other EIA surveys. The data collected are necessary to continue a long-term consistent, but evolving, data series of basic summary information on natural gas. These data are essential to provide analysts with the tools necessary to make informed assessments of the variations in natural gas supply, demand, and prices over time and geography.

The information collected on Form EIA‑176 is needed and used by EIA for the following purposes:

  1. To develop and make available to the Congress, the states, and the public an accurate quantified assessment of the disposition of natural gas, and the manner in which it was stored, shipped, and consumed or otherwise disposed of

  2. To determine the quantity of natural and supplemental gas consumed within each of the various states by market sector, the average prices for such gas, and the changes in consumption and price patterns over time from the first purchase through the final price paid by consumers

  3. To produce the Natural Gas Annual (NGA)

  4. To provide natural gas data for the State Energy Portal

  5. To provide natural gas input data to energy supply, demand, and price forecasting models especially EIA’s National Energy Modeling System and Short-Term Integrated Forecasting System

  6. To supply the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) with background and baseline information on the total natural gas market by state and groups of states,

  7. To provide natural gas input data to the following EIA publications: Annual Energy Outlook, Short-Term Energy Outlook, and Monthly Energy Review, which are distributed to all members of Congress

  8. To respond to Congressional and internal departmental requests for analysis of policy and regulatory issues

  9. To provide a frame for selecting respondents of Form EIA-857, Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers, survey

  10. To provide a portal of company-level utility information collected on Form EIA-176 for external analytic purposes at http://www.eia.gov/cfapps/ngqs/ngqs.cfm

A.2.2. Form EIA‑191, Monthly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

Form EIA‑191 collects monthly data on the location, ownership, capacity, and operations of all active underground natural gas storage reservoirs in the United States. Underground natural gas storage facilities are necessary because of fluctuating seasonal, daily, and even hourly market requirements. Natural gas is usually injected into storage when market requirements are below available gas flows in transmission lines, and then is withdrawn from storage when supplies from producing fields and/or the capacities of transmission systems are inadequate to meet peak requirements.

The information collected on Form EIA‑191 is used by EIA for the following purposes:

  1. To provide state‑level data on underground natural gas storage with respect to injections, withdrawal capabilities, inventories, type of storage facility, location of facilities, and capacity for EIA's Natural Gas Monthly. State‑level storage data are comparable with state‑level production and consumption data published in the Natural Gas Monthly. This monthly data collection also provides reliable baseline data on storage operations necessary for analyses, modeling, and comparison with normal industry operations in case of severe weather, natural disaster, or other extreme circumstances

  2. To serve as the universe from which the sample for the weekly survey Form EIA-912 is drawn

  3. To provide data on underground natural gas storage injections, withdrawals, and inventories for EIA's Natural Gas Weekly Update, and Monthly Energy Review.

  4. To provide data on underground natural gas storage inventories for the forecasts contained in the EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook

  5. To provide data on all aspects of underground natural gas storage to enable EIA, FERC, and other elements of the DOE to identify and assess the supplies of gas in storage by geographic location on a timely basis

  6. To provide data for system deliverability studies undertaken by EIA as a part of its analysis tasks. Capacity information is collected at the reservoir level to allow comparisons of the utilization of the individual reservoirs. Storage data are a critical link in understanding the peak day deliverability of the natural gas system and overall system operations

  7. To produce the Natural Gas Annual (NGA)

  8. To provide a portal of storage field-level capacity and deliverability information collected on Form EIA-191 for external analytic purposes at http://www.eia.gov/cfapps/ngqs/ngqs.cfm

A.2.3. Form EIA-757, Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey

The purpose of Form EIA-757 is to collect data on the operational status and capacity of natural gas processing plants to understand their production levels and characteristics, as well as to monitor constraints resulting from natural gas supply emergencies. The information is used to develop periodic reports presenting aggregate information on processing plant capacity and operations. In an emergency situation that disrupts natural gas supplies, the information collected from Schedule B of this form is used to assess the severity of the disruption to market conditions. The location of natural gas processing plants in the supply chain, between production and consumption, allows quick collection of relatively low-cost information about the impact of a natural gas supply disruption. This information is crucial during a natural gas supply disruption for informed decision and policy making. The information collected through this survey is used widely by Federal and state agencies, Congress, industry analysts and the general public to understand the operational capabilities and characteristics of natural gas processing plants. In the event of a natural gas supply emergency, it is used to understand the plant constraints and expected recovery from an emergency.

Using information reported on Form EIA-757, EIA can publish periodic reports on the operational characteristics, status, and constraints of natural gas processing plants, providing aggregate statistics. EIA will report aggregate information from Schedule A each time Schedule A is fielded, at most every three years. Data collected on Part 5 of Form EIA-757 Schedule A are publicly available on EIA’s Query System. EIA will determine the frequency of reporting aggregate information from Schedule B at the time the schedule is activated. Aggregate statistics, based on Form EIA-757, would be published every three years or less frequently depending on resources. In the case of a natural gas supply disruption, aggregate statistics may be published either daily or weekly, in emergency status reports prepared by EIA and DOE, and used in the production of several other EIA information products.

It is used:

  1. To develop and make available to the Congress, the states, other Government agencies and the public a timely and accurate quantified assessment of current natural gas processing plant operations, outages, operational capacity, and constraints

  2. As an input to other EIA and DOE information products, such as DOE Situation Reports

  3. To provide an input to supply, demand, and price forecasting models, such as the Short-Term Integrated Forecasting System

  4. To respond to Congressional, internal Departmental and inter-Agency requests for analysis of natural gas supply constraints and operating levels in the United States, as well as policy and regulatory issues

A.2.4. Form EIA‑857, Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers

Form EIA‑857 was designed to collect monthly natural gas data at the state level consisting of average natural gas purchase prices, consumption of natural gas by sector, and average price by sector from a sample of the respondents reporting on Form EIA-176. These data are necessary to provide timely information needed to measure the combined impact of government, industry, and consumer actions; geographic location; fuel competition; climatic or seasonal conditions; and a host of other factors upon the natural gas industry and natural gas consumers.

The purchased gas data collected on Form EIA-857 are needed to develop average delivered, or city gate, prices to provide analysts and decision‑makers with information on the levels and rates of change in “wholesale” prices to distribution systems and the differences in such prices across the nation. This information provides direct measures of the combined effect of producer prices, transportation costs, and pipeline‑provided services upon distributors’ purchased gas costs and the variations geographically, seasonally, and under changing market conditions. The information collected also enables analysts to monitor the effects of Public Utility Commission actions at the state level.

Consumer price information collected enables EIA to provide information on the prices by consumer class on a monthly basis. Consumer prices provide analysts and decision‑makers, with direct measures of average consumer prices and price changes, geographically, seasonally, among consumer classes, and under changing market conditions.

Collection of revenue data associated with gas distributed to end users for the account of others is used by EIA to analyze changes in distribution tariffs and for projections of future natural gas prices in EIA’s Short-Term Energy Outlook and Annual Energy Outlook. EIA calculates the average cost of distribution services charged by local natural gas utilities to end-use consumers. EIA exempts pipeline companies in Form EIA-857 survey sample from reporting transportation revenues that are outside the scope of the reporting requirement.

EIA currently collects information about the number of customers for each of the end-use sectors for gas sold and transported to residential, commercial, industrial, electric power, and other customers. Having this data enables EIA to better monitor fluctuations in monthly volume reporting which are commonly the result of changes to the number of customers being served.

Current data on consumption by the major consumer classes by state are necessary to enable EIA to provide timely information on any changes in the levels of consumption at the state level by sector, analyze the patterns of change over time and the underlying drivers, and develop projections of future usage patterns for inclusion in the Short-Term Energy Outlook and Annual Energy Outlook.

State‑level data are necessary to enable EIA to provide information on the frequently substantial differences in prices and consumption patterns among the various states. State-level data allow analysts to view and assess regional disparities in prices and consumption with respect to local climate, regulatory structure, proximity to supply, transmission capabilities, and demand requirements. Information on consumption profiles is necessary to enable analysts and decision‑makers to assess ultimate impacts of various legislative or industry actions upon particular areas or regions.

The information collected on Form EIA‑857 is used to estimate:

  1. Monthly average price by state of natural gas delivered by local distribution companies

  2. Monthly average price of natural gas billed to residential, commercial, and industrial consumers in each of the various states

  3. Total quantity of natural gas for which residential, commercial, industrial, electric power, and vehicle fuel consumers used each month in each of the various states

State and national level aggregate data are published in EIA's Natural Gas Monthly, Monthly Energy Review, and Winter Fuels Report, and are made available to the Executive Branch, Congress, state governments, industry, and the public.

If the collection of information on Form EIA‑857 is not conducted, EIA would be unable to provide current information on natural gas market sectors. This information facilitates legislation and regulation in the detail and time frame necessary for policy makers to make informed decisions. Seasonality of the market is an important driver of the price and supply. Monthly data are the minimum level of reporting that will allow for assessment of the impacts of weather and other seasonal factors on the consumption and price patterns.

A.2.5. Form EIA-910, Monthly Natural Gas Marketers Survey

To ensure the coverage of all natural gas sales to residential and commercial consumers in its natural gas price data, EIA is requesting continued use of Form EIA-910, Monthly Natural Gas Marketers Survey. This survey was first approved for use in May 2001, under ICR 1905-0202. Form EIA-910 collects state-level monthly data on sales to residential and commercial customers by companies that market natural gas but are not involved in the physical final deliveries of gas to customers. Form EIA-857, Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers, collects information on direct sales and gas transported for others from companies making deliveries of natural gas. Combining information from Forms EIA-910 and EIA-857 helps ensure complete price coverage of natural gas deliveries in the states surveyed, as marketers account for a significant share of natural gas sales to end-users in certain states.

In 2012, the OMB granted permission for EIA to continue data collection activities of natural gas marketers in Georgia, Ohio and New York, with the option to collect in an additional six states based on market coverage and EIA resources to expand the survey.

EIA incorporates Form EIA-910 data collected from marketers who sell natural gas to residential and commercial customers into EIA’s monthly and annual natural gas databases to improve the accuracy of EIA’s price estimates. Data from Form EIA-910 supplements information already tabulated and published in other EIA publications. The data are used in EIA’s modeling and analytical efforts, and to answer questions from federal policymakers, Congress, and the general public. These data are needed for policy making; for assessing supply, demand and price developments within the industry, and for assessing the competitiveness of the industry.

A.2.6. Form EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

Form EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report (WNGSR), provides a data series for natural gas in underground storage similarly to the formerly published by the American Gas Association (AGA). The AGA began data collection in 1994 and discontinued its data collection on May 1, 2002. EIA initiated data collection on March 15, 2002 under an emergency clearance (ICR 1905-0202). The emergency clearance allowed EIA to survey a sample of underground storage operators on a weekly basis to continue the data series.

The Office of Enforcement and Office of Analytics and Surveillance at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, (FERC) uses the weekly underground natural gas storage report to assess the tightness of supply of natural gas and to understand U.S. gas market fundamentals. FERC references this weekly report in their winter and summer seasonal assessments and state of the market reports available at https://www.ferc.gov/market-oversight/reports-analyses/reports-analyses.asp. FERC staff use the WNGSR to track volumes of natural gas in storage, weekly injections and withdrawals, and their impact on spot and futures gas prices. They also use the EIA-912 data as price screens to understand changes in gas spot prices in response to the release of the weekly storage report each Thursday. FERC sets a threshold for spot price changes, both in domestic and foreign trading markets, due to the weekly storage report. When the spot price change exceeds the threshold, FERC analyzes other causation factors that explain the spot price movements.

The WNGSR is EIA’s only report designated as a Principal Federal Economic Indicator (PFEI). The WNGSR was designated as a PFEI in January 2008, because it is a key source of weekly natural gas volumetric data, a market signal of readily available natural gas supply. Natural gas is a key part of energy markets and a key influence on the prices set on spot and futures contract markets is the amount of natural gas in underground storage. For this reason, the U.S. natural gas market relies heavily on the WNGSR, typically released on Thursday at 10:30 a.m. EST.

Figures 1 and 2 illustrate the significant impact on the natural gas market of EIA’s WNGSR at one point in time and over time. Figure 1 shows the data trend for September 21, 2017, on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX). After the EIA data were released at 10:30 a.m., there was a significant decline in the near-month futures prices. Figure 2 illustrates the impact on the NYMEX from December 19, 2005, through February 1, 2006, immediately following the release each Thursday morning of EIA’s natural gas storage numbers.

Figure 2: Natural Gas Markets Respond to WNGSR Releases

Source: EIA via Bloomberg data



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Figure 2: Natural Gas Markets Rely Heavily on EIA Weekly Data



Source: Bloomberg

Each week, EIA collects data on the amount of working natural gas in underground storage facilities as of 9 a.m. Central Standard Time Friday. EIA compiles and processes these data for release on its website the following Thursday at 10:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST). The total volume of natural gas in underground storage reservoirs is classified as either base gas or working gas. Underground storage facilities may be reservoirs in depleted oil and gas fields, aquifers, or salt caverns.

Summary totals of working gas stocks are presented for the United States. They are broken into five regions: the East, Midwest, Mountain, South Central, South Central, and Pacific regions. This represents an expansion of the original survey, which only covered three regions: the East, West, and Producing regions. In the 2014 OMB Clearance Package, EIA requested and obtained approval for the collection of two additional regions, giving the published data more granularity and utility for data users.

Respondents are also instructed to submit revisions to data for previous weeks if those revisions were greater than 500 million cubic feet and to include notes explaining any unusual activity. Examples of unusual activity include inventory adjustments, such as reclassification of working and base gas, or changes in ownership, or operation of storage fields. In practice, respondents do not often have need to provide notes on unusual activity. In Form EIA-912, inventory adjustments will be reported in Part 4, broken out by geographic region.

Form EIA-912 data are used to respond to requests from industry to provide weekly measures of natural gas underground storage operations. EIA uses the data to prepare analytical products assessing storage operations in the five geographical regions and the impact of those operations on supplies available for the winter heating season.

A.3. Use of Information Technology

In an effort to reduce respondent burden and to provide for more timely processing of filings, automated reporting of natural gas data is accepted, provided such reports are prepared and transmitted to EIA in the same format as in the data collection form. Data are submitted by the Internet using secure file transfer, facsimile, and email. In addition, companies reporting on Form EIA-176 may use an Electronic Filing System that can be downloaded from EIA’s web site. Due to time constraints on the weekly survey, Form EIA-912 respondents electronically file their reports by e-mail. More than 98% of natural gas survey forms are submitted electronically.

A.4. Efforts to Identify Duplication

A.4.1. Form EIA‑176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition

Certain data elements similar to those reported on Form EIA‑176 are collected and compiled or estimated from other EIA surveys. Data on electric power sector consumption and price from Form EIA‑923, “Power Plant Operations Report,” is used for electric power sector consumption and price summaries to maintain consistency in published consumption information. Electric power data collected on Form EIA‑176 are for internal balancing of individual reports and for cross‑checking data collected on Form EIA‑923. This cross‑checking enables EIA to identify misreporting by electric power consumers, a benefit that outweighs the negligible burden involved. The inclusion of lines for reporting deliveries to electric power generators and volumes transported to electric power generators for the account of others allows the respondent to account for all volumes of natural gas delivered to end users. The respondent then can perform reasonableness checks on the supply/disposition balance and for unaccounted volumes. This internal check is designed to eliminate some follow-up calls and reduce reporting burden for the respondent.

Certain data collected on Form EIA‑176 survey are similar to data reported by interstate natural gas pipeline companies on FERC Form 2, Annual Report of Major Natural Gas Companies. However, the content and format of FERC Form 2 are not directly comparable to the data collected on Form EIA‑176, particularly in terms of state specific, physical custody data. State‑by‑state data necessary to develop individual state gas balances, comparable with data collected from respondents other than interstate pipeline companies on Form EIA‑176, cannot be extracted from the FERC Form 2 report. Tracking movements of natural gas across state lines and tracking of flows of natural gas from production areas to end users are two essential purposes of Form EIA-176. Transport of natural gas across state lines is performed almost entirely by interstate pipeline companies and the volumes transported state-to-state are not reported on FERC Form 2.

One new proposed item to Form EIA-176 is Part 3 Item F, which asks respondents reporting for local distribution companies (LDCs) to list the names and zip codes of aboveground liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities owned by, operated by, or providing service to their company. This descriptive data item complements Part 4 Item 2.2 which asks for LNG storage withdrawal volumes, and Part 5 Item 8.1, which asks for LNG storage inventories. This data item will help provide a more complete picture of the aboveground LNG storage market, as it will provide insight into which LNG facilities are providing service to which LDCs.

The U.S. Department of Transportation has an annual survey of aboveground LNG facilities, and makes their data collected available to the public: https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/data-and-statistics/pipeline/distribution-transmission-gathering-lng-and-liquid-annual-data. This dataset contains a wide range of information about each of the 156 aboveground LNG storage facilities, including location, function, liquefaction and regasification rates, and capacity. However, the dataset does not provide information on the connection between LDCs and aboveground LNG storage facilities. The dataset cannot be used to determine which LNG storage facilities are providing service to a specific LDC. This information is important in an emergency response situation, as decision makers need to know all available pipeline connections and sources of supply that could reasonably be accessed during periods of supply disruption. Accordingly, the proposed Part 3 Item F of the From EIA-176 survey is not duplicative of any current data collection instrument.

Each of the above mentioned systems collect data that are similar to data collected on Form EIA‑176. However, with the exceptions noted, data collected cannot be reasonably substituted, in whole or in part, for data collected on Form EIA‑176.

A.4.2. Form EIA‑191, Monthly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

Data similar to the underground storage information on Form EIA-191 are collected on the weekly survey Form EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report. However, the weekly survey is collected from a sample of the monthly survey respondents in order to provide a more timely measure of market information. Form EIA-191 is collected from the census of underground storage operators and is used as the benchmark for adjustments to Form EIA-912 data.

A.4.3. Form EIA-757, Natural Gas Processing Plant Survey


Data similar to the capacity and design of gas processing plants collected on Form EIA-757 are not currently collected by EIA or any other organization. EIA investigated alternative ways to obtain timely and precise natural gas processing plant information for use in assessing processing plant operations, damage and expected restoration during a supply emergency. The alternatives considered were using monthly data from natural gas processors, Form EIA-816, Monthly Natural Gas Liquids Report, and a potential new EIA survey of natural gas processing plants.


A summary of the review of alternatives to Form EIA-757 follows: EIA has collected monthly data from operators of natural gas processing plants on Form EIA-816, Monthly Natural Gas Liquids Report (OMB No. 1905-0165) for many years. Form EIA-816 collects information on the supply and disposition of natural gas liquids from operators of natural gas processing plants (which extract liquid hydrocarbons from a natural gas stream) and stocks at fractionators (which separate a liquid hydrocarbon stream into its component products). EIA considered revising the form to collect additional information to assess processing plant operations and capabilities during a natural gas supply emergency. EIA found it is not timely to provide information about emergency operations and constraints because certain aspects of the survey would result in undue burden and would prevent gathering reliable information about processing plant operations, capabilities, and recovery during a supply emergency. The current reporting lag for data collected on Form EIA-816 is 60 days after the end of the month. This lag is insufficient for EIA to satisfy the need for information during a supply emergency. If a supply emergency happened on September 1, data from Form EIA-816 would not be available until the end of November and would not satisfy EIA’s need for timely information during a natural gas supply emergency.

A.4.4. Form EIA‑857, Monthly Report of Natural Gas Purchases and Deliveries to Consumers

Certain elements of data similar to these collected on Form EIA‑857 are available to EIA from other surveys or sources, but none that could be used or modified for the purposes described above.

Monthly information on the average price of natural gas to residential consumers is available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), but the price is only for given quantities of gas in major metropolitan areas. Volume information is not available. The data cannot be presented by state and do not represent average prices of quantities actually consumed.

Annual information is available by state on purchased gas prices, consumer prices by market sector, and consumption by market sector from Form EIA‑176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition. Form EIA‑857 complements Form EIA‑176 by providing current information reflecting monthly and seasonal variations associated with the supply and disposition of natural gas. Data collected Form EIA‑176 information is used to develop the sample frame for Form EIA‑857 survey and provides an annual control for testing and adjusting Form EIA‑857 survey estimation procedures.

A.4.5. Form EIA-910, Monthly Natural Gas Marketer Survey

The data elements collected on Form EIA-910 are not duplicated in other surveys or sources known to EIA.

A.4.6. Form EIA-912, Weekly Underground Natural Gas Storage Report

The EIA’s WNGSR is the only source of national volumetric information available on a timely basis. No alternative private sources for comparable national and regional weekly storage data are known.

Flows of natural gas into underground storage can be observed on interstate pipelines due to regulations that require public posting of nominations on electronic bulletin boards. Third-party analysts use this data to derive estimates of total changes to natural gas storage inventories. However, due to limited coverage and the variable nature of nominations data, Form EIA-912 is a much more accurate vehicle to provide weekly estimates of natural gas storage stocks.

A.5. Provisions for Reducing Burden on Small Business

Data requested provide the minimum information necessary to fulfill EIA's responsibility to provide meaningful, timely, objective, and accurate energy data. Respondents to the survey complete only those data elements applicable to their operations. For small firms, fewer data elements are generally applicable and are easily obtained from generally existing records. EIA staff members are also available during normal business hours to provide assistance by telephone.

EIA encourages electronic reporting on all natural gas surveys.

Companies responding to Form EIA‑191 and EIA-912 are typically not small businesses. Form EIA-912 uses a sample in order to minimize reporting burden on small facilities, which are more likely to be operated by a small business.

Form EIA-176 is required of all companies with natural gas deliveries to end-use customers regardless of size. However, the majority of the small-sized respondents only have to fill out a small percentage of the data elements on the form as the majority of the questions asked are not applicable to small-sized respondents. Therefore, the burden to small businesses on Form EIA-176 is the minimum necessary to gather the information required.

Form EIA-910 survey burden is the minimum amount of time necessary to gather the information required. Similarly, the natural gas processing plant operators that complete Form EIA-757 are not small businesses or other small entities.

Respondents to the survey complete only those data elements applicable to their operations. Sampling practices are utilized for the weekly surveys in order to minimize burden on respondents while still ensuring that quality summary-level data can be estimated for publication. The use of the Internet by respondents reduces reporting burden by eliminating paperwork and reducing the need for follow-up calls and resubmissions of the forms. Also, EIA staff members are available during normal business hours to provide assistance by telephone.

A.6.Consequences of Less Frequent Reporting

Data are required at the requested frequency in order to satisfy EIA's programmatic needs as described in A2 above. The requested frequency of reporting is: Form EIA‑176, annually; and Forms EIA‑191, EIA‑857, and EIA-910 monthly. Form EIA-912 is filed weekly. Form EIA-912 provides timely data on underground storage and is routinely relied upon by financial traders to assess current supply conditions in natural gas markets. It is a leading economic indicator and its timed release every work affects daily futures trading for New York Mercantile Exchange Henry Hub Natural Gas Near-Month Futures Contract prices. Form EIA-757 baseline survey, Schedule A, is filed no more than once every three years. Without these data, natural gas market participants, including local distribution companies, producers, traders, importers, gas purchasers, Federal and state agencies providing income assistance for energy, and the gas trading community, would not have accurate, comprehensive, and timely information about natural gas supply and demand. The importance of timely information and the fact that there are no other sources are the basis for the requested report frequency.

If Form EIA-757 collection is not conducted, EIA could not provide essential natural gas processing plant information prior to and during a supply emergency. Less frequent reporting would prohibit EIA from meeting its mandate of providing timely and reliable energy information. The frequency of reporting on Schedule B will be determined at the time the survey is activated in response to a supply emergency.

A.7. Compliance with 5 CFR 1320.5

There are not any special circumstances for these collections.

A.8. Summary of Consultation Outside EIA

A request for comments from interested persons was solicited in a Federal Register notice describing the proposed extension of the forms and proposed modifications to each form. The notice was published in the Federal Register, 82 Fed. Reg. 82, 20333 (May 1, 2017). An announcement of the Federal Register notice was sent to current respondents to Forms EIA-176, EIA-857, EIA-191, EIA-912, and EIA-910. The notice and proposed versions of the survey forms were posted on EIA’s website.

EIA conducted a cognitive research project during March-April, 2017 involving 8 participants to collect feedback on the proposed changes to Form EIA-176, Annual Report of Natural and Supplemental Gas Supply and Disposition. The participants of this cognitive research project included six Local Distribution Companies, a vehicle fuel provider, and a natural gas infrastructure operator. Half of the interviews were conducted via telephone, while the rest were on-site interviews with the respondents of Form EIA-176. The on-site interviews were conducted at participants’ offices located in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Charlotte, and Gastonia, NC. This research project checked the accuracy of the current burden per response for Form EIA-176. The results show that the current response burden of 12 hours is accurate. The responses from participants were aggregated to estimate an average response burden of 12.4 hours, which is not significantly different than the current burden per response estimate. SDT estimates the combined changes will increase the average response burden by 6 minutes. However EIA did not implement all of the changes that were tested in the cognitive research. Therefore the burden per response of 12 hours remains the same.

EIA held a WebEx on June 22, 2017 for survey respondents to explain the major changes that were part of the OMB Clearance Package. The WebEx included over 60 attendees online and lasted approximately 30 minutes. EIA subsequently posted the PowerPoint presentation and a recording of the WebEx presentation on the website for reference to any interested parties who were unavailable to attend. These items were made available on the special notice page for the 60-Day Federal Register Notice, and accessed at:


Webinar available at:

https://www.eia.gov/survey/notice/ngdownstreamforms2018.mp4


Briefing Materials available at:

https://www.eia.gov/survey/notice/ngdownstreamforms2018.pptx


A.9. Payments or Gifts to Respondents

No payments or gifts are made to the survey respondents.

A.10. Provisions for Confidentiality of Information

EIA considers information collected on Forms EIA-176, EIA-757, and certain data elements collected on Form EIA-191 to be public information.

The following statement is included in the instructions to Forms EIA-176:

Information reported on this survey form is considered public information and may be publicly released in company or individually identifiable form.”

The following statement is included in the instructions to Form EIA-757:

Information reported on Form EIA-757 is considered public information, except for Part 3 of Schedule A, and may be publicly released in company or individually identifiable form.”

The following statement regarding protected data elements is included in the instructions of the version of Form EIA-191:

Information collected in Parts 1, 2, and 3, as well as Base Gas data, on Form EIA-191 will be considered public information, and may be publicly released in company or individually identifiable form. Information collected in Part 4 (including Working Gas and Total Gas in Storage data but excluding Base Gas), however, will be protected and not disclosed to the public to the extent that it satisfies the criteria for exemption under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. §552, the DOE regulations, 10 C.F.R. §1004.11, implementing the FOIA, and the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. §1905.

Forms EIA-910 and EIA-912 protect these data under the Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act (CIPSEA). These data are considered confidential and will be used exclusively for statistical purposes. The instructions to Forms EIA-910 and EIA-912 contain the following data confidentiality notice:

The information you provide on Form EIA-XXX will be used for statistical purposes only and is confidential by law. In accordance with the Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 and other applicable Federal laws, your responses will not be disclosed in identifiable form without your consent. Per the Federal Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015, Federal information systems are protected from malicious activities through cybersecurity screening of transmitted data. Every EIA employee, as well as every agent, is subject to a jail term, a fine, or both if he or she makes public ANY identifiable information you reported.

EIA will protect information reported on Form EIA-857. The instructions to Form EIA-857 contain the following provision:

Information reported on Form EIA-857 will be protected and not disclosed to the public to the extent that it satisfies the criteria for exemption under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. §552, the DOE regulations, 10 C.F.R.§1004.11, implementing the FOIA, and the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. §1905.

The Federal Energy Administration Act requires EIA to provide company-specific data to other Federal agencies when requested for official use. The information reported on this form may also be made available, upon request, to another component of the Department of Energy (DOE); or to any Committee of Congress, the U.S. Government Accountability Office, or other Federal agencies authorized by law to receive such information. A court of competent jurisdiction may obtain this information in response to an order. The information may be used for any nonstatistical purposes such as administrative, regulatory, law enforcement, or adjudicatory purposes.

Disclosure limitation procedures are not applied to the statistical data published from Form EIA-857 survey information. Thus, there may be some statistics that are based on data from fewer than three respondents, or that are dominated by data from one or two large respondents. In these cases, it may be possible for a knowledgeable person to estimate the information reported by a specific respondent.

A.11. Justification for Sensitive Questions

The forms contain no questions of a sensitive nature.

A.12. Estimate of Respondent Burden Hours and Cost

* Schedule A of Form EIA-757 is collected triennially.

**Form EIA-757 Schedule B will be collected only in response to a significant disruption in natural gas supply. 20 respondents will be accounted for over a three-year period for Schedule B based on the most recent activation of the survey in 2012, which was in response to Hurricane Isaac. These 20 respondents completed the survey twice daily over the course of 7 days, (14*20) yielding an annual total of 280 responses and 420 burden hours. The 420 burden hours is multiplied by (2/3) to equal 280 burden hours shown in Table A1 above for Form EIA-757 Sch. B. based on the assumption that two significant supply disruption incidences may occur every three years.

Table A1 shows the estimates of respondent burden for the individual forms contained in this package. The overall annual respondent burden is estimated to be 50,724 hours. The estimated costs to respondents for the burden hours are estimated to be $3,736,330 (50,724 hours times $73.66 per hour).

EIA estimates that there are no additional costs to respondents associated with the surveys in the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package other than the costs associated with the burden hours as set forth in Table A1 above.

A.13. Annual Cost to the Government

The annual cost estimate which includes personnel, development/maintenance, collection, processing, analysis, and publication for the six surveys in the Natural Gas Downstream package is $2,490,000. This cost is calculated for 7 FTE federal staff and 8 FTE contractor staff. This cost includes an overhead for the federal staff to cover indirect costs such as space, supplies, etc. and the total contractor staff cost which already included the overhead costs.



A.14. Changes in Burden

The overall burden for the Natural Gas Data Collection Program Package is estimated to be 50,724 hours annually for all the forms included in this clearance package. The information collections in this request are currently approved under OMB control number ICR 1905-0175 for a total existing burden of 51,367 hours. This request will result in a net decrease of 643 hours for all the forms in this clearance package.




A.15. Reasons for Changes in Burden

The decrease in total burden hours is primarily due to a decrease in the number of respondents on Form EIA-910 from 210 to 100 and is shown as change in Agency Discretion. The decrease is due to reducing the geographic coverage on Form EIA-910 from 9 states to 3 states. The reporting burden per response for Form EIA-757 Schedule. A increased from .5 hours to .6 hours to adjust for the additional time needed to update contact information and production capacity and is also shown as a change in Agency Discretion. For Forms EIA-176, EIA-191, and EIA-912, the number of annual responses increased because the number of respondents in the reporting frame for those surveys increased and is shown as a change in Agency Estimate.  The burden hours increased for Form EIA-757 Schedule B because the number of responses increased so that EIA will be able to respond to an energy emergency in the event of a natural disaster or similar major market disruption. The previous clearance did not provide any burden hours in the event of an emergency activation for this survey.



A.16. Collection, Tabulation, and Publication Plans

The data collected, reviewed, and tabulated by EIA from Form EIA‑176 will be merged with data collected on Forms EIA-857 and EIA-910 to develop quantitative overviews of gas available to each of the various states and the sources of such gas; gas used or otherwise disposed of in each of the various states; the number of consumers; total and average quantities consumed; and total and average prices paid by consumers by market sector in each of the various states. The data will be used as input to the State Energy Data System, the Short-Term Integrated Forecasting System, the National Energy Modeling System, and other supply, demand, and price forecast models. They are published in the Natural Gas Annual and provide input to the Natural Gas Monthly, Annual Energy Outlook, Monthly Energy Review, Short-Term Energy Outlook and State Energy Profiles.

A.16.1 Annual Survey

The time schedule for the Natural Gas Annual data collection, tabulation, and publication is shown in Table A4 below.

Table A4 Time Schedule for the Natural Gas Annual

EIA Form

Due date

Extension Date

Processing completion

Posted on website

EIA-176

March 1

April 1

September 30

November 20

The Natural Gas Annual publication is typically released by December 31 of each year.

A.16.2. Monthly Surveys

Data gathered monthly on Forms EIA‑191, EIA-857, and EIA-910 will be reviewed, verified, and aggregated to be used as input for the Natural Gas Monthly and the Monthly Energy Review publications. In addition, data collected from Form EIA-191 will be used in studies of peak day supplies to major market areas, utilization of storage capacity, and the load leveling function of storage in the market.

Individual company reports will be checked for reasonableness by comparing current reports with prior responses. Respondents will be required to resubmit reports containing any inconsistencies or errors.

A typical time schedule for the monthly Forms EIA-191, EIA-857, and EIA-910 data collection tabulation and publication is shown below using August data release for the example:

Table A5: Natural Gas Monthly – August 20XX Issue

EIA Form

Data report month

Due Date

Processing complete

Posted on website

EIA-191

June

July 20

August 20

August 31

EIA-857

June

July 30

August 20

August 31

EIA-910

June

July 30

August 20

August 31

A typical time schedule for the weekly Form EIA-912 data collection, tabulation, and publication is shown below using the first several weeks of August as example. The weekly natural gas underground storage report is released every Thursday at 10:30 AM EST.

Table A6: Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report – August 20xx Issues

EIA Form

Data report for week ending

Due Date

Processing complete

Posted on website

EIA-912

August 1

August 4

August 6

August 7

EIA-912

August 8

August 11

August 13

August 14

EIA-912

August 15

August 18

August 20

August 21



A.17. OMB Number and Expiration Date

The OMB Number 1905-0175 and expiration date will be displayed on all the data collection forms and instructions.

A.18 Certification Statement

There are no exceptions to the certification statement of OMB Form 83-I.

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