- What is a natural gas ETF?
- Top Canadian Natural gas ETFs
- Horizons Natural Gas ETF
- BetaPro Natural Gas Leveraged Daily Bull ETF
- United States Natural Gas Fund
- ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas
- What to know before investing in natural gas ETFs
- Pros of investing in natural gas ETFs
- Cons of investing in natural gas ETFs
- Are natural gas ETFs right for you?
Natural gas remains a focal point in the clean-energy transition, but recent data shows a shift toward measurable emission-reduction outcomes rather than broad investment forecasts. The IEA’s Global Methane Tracker 2025 reports that global fossil-fuel operations emitted about 145 Mt of methane in 2024, with natural-gas systems responsible for roughly 35 Mt1. Crucially, about 70% of these emissions could be abated with existing technology, reinforcing the sector’s push toward rapid mitigation.
Policy momentum has accelerated this shift. In late 2024, U.S. regulators committed US$850 million to methane-reduction projects across the oil and gas supply chain, strengthening the economic case for upgrading equipment and improving leak-detection systems. Industry data shows these efforts are having an impact: ONE Future members reported a methane-intensity improvement from 0.331% in 2023 to 0.280% in 2024, a reduction of more than 15%2.
On the demand side, structural growth remains intact. McKinsey continues to project strong LNG expansion, expecting global demand to rise 3.5% annually through 2035 and require about 100 million tonnes of new LNG capacity. This demand outlook is driven by regions where domestic supply cannot keep pace with consumption, reinforcing natural gas’s role as a flexible, export-driven fuel.
Still, the resource’s strategic position is evolving. Fast-growing renewables, higher capital-cost hurdles, and stricter methane-performance standards create a more selective environment for new projects. Natural gas remains an important transitional fuel, but its long-term trajectory will depend heavily on sustained emissions progress and global climate-policy alignment.
For investors, natural gas continues to serve two primary purposes: short-term speculation on price movements and long-term positioning as an inflation or energy-security hedge. Exposure is accessible through exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that track natural-gas-linked securities or price benchmarks.
Here’s all you need to know about natural gas ETFs in Canada in 2026.
What is a natural gas ETF?
A natural gas ETF is an open-ended fund that holds a portfolio, or “basket” of securities that track natural gas prices. Unlike physical commodity ETFs like gold that can store bullion, natural gas ETFs can’t store physical natural gas due to cost and space constraints.
Instead, these ETFs hold derivatives called futures contracts, which in this case are agreements to buy or sell natural gas at a certain price at a certain time. By holding futures contracts, these natural gas ETFs gain synthetic exposure to natural gas.
Like all ETFs, shares of natural gas ETFs trade on exchanges under their own ticker and charge a percentage fee called a management expense ratio, or MER.
Top Canadian Natural gas ETFs
The following ETFs provide exposure to natural gas via futures contracts. Because the Canadian ETF market is smaller, some of the picks here are U.S.-listed ETFs. To buy these ETFs, Canadian investors will need to convert to U.S. dollars.
| Natural Gas ETF | Inception date | Highlights |
| Horizons Natural Gas ETF (TSX:HUN) | June 24, 2009 | Tracks natural gas futures via the Solactive Natural Gas Winter MD Rolling Futures Index ER |
| BetaPro Natural Gas Leveraged Daily Bull ETF (TSX:HNU) | January 15, 2008 | Provides 2x daily leveraged exposure to natural gas futures via the Horizons Natural Gas Rolling Futures Index |
| United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSEMKTS: UNG) | April 18, 2007 | Tracks natural gas futures that reflect the price of natural gas delivered at the Henry Hub in Louisiana |
| ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas (NYSEMKTS: BOIL) | November 4, 2011 | Provides 2x daily leveraged exposure to natural gas futures via the Bloomberg Natural Gas Subindex |
Horizons Natural Gas ETF
For Canadian investors not looking to convert currency, HUN provides the most straightforward way of investing in natural gas. The ETF tracks the Solactive Natural Gas Winter MD Rolling Futures Index ER, which holds a portfolio of natural gas contracts.
BetaPro Natural Gas Leveraged Daily Bull ETF
Advanced investors looking to trade natural gas prices with leveraged exposure can consider HNU. This ETF is essentially the leveraged version of HUN. It provides 2x daily exposure to the Horizons Natural Gas Rolling Futures Index. As noted earlier, this ETF is highly volatile and not suitable for holding periods longer than a day.
United States Natural Gas Fund
If you’re investing in U.S. dollars, UNG could be a possible alternative. This fund tracks the price of natural gas delivered at the Henry Hub, Louisiana by trading natural gas futures contracts on the NYMEX, and is collateralized with cash and U.S. government bonds.
ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas
Investors looking for a leveraged natural gas ETF traded in U.S. dollars can opt for BOIL. This ETF provides daily 2x leveraged exposure to the Bloomberg Natural Gas Subindex. As with all leveraged ETFs, holding BOIL longer than a day can result in unpredictable returns due to compounding.
What to know before investing in natural gas ETFs
Investors who buy natural gas ETFs need to be aware of a phenomenon called “contango,” which occurs in many commodity futures markets. Contango occurs when the futures contract price for a commodity, like natural gas, is higher than the current or “spot” price. In simple terms, contango happens when investors expect the price of a commodity to increase over time.
As a result, the futures contracts will cost more than the present-day spot price of the commodity. When the ETF needs to roll over its contracts (sell expiring contracts and buy new ones), it will have to pay a higher price for the new contracts. Therefore, contango can erode the value of a natural gas ETF over time as the ETF is effectively buying high and selling low.3
Finally, some commodities ETFs can provide leveraged exposure to natural gas futures indexes. For example, if the index of these leveraged natural gas ETFs goes up by 1% in a day, the leveraged ETF will return 2%. And vice-versa, the leveraged natural gas ETF will fall by 2% if the index falls by 1%. The leverage target of these ETFs is only intended to be accurate for a single day.
Thus, leveraged natural gas ETFs should not be held long term. In general, they’re considered to be advanced tactical day or swing-trading tools. They’re generally not suitable for beginner investors and can behave unpredictably if held longer than a single trading day, as leveraged gains and losses can compound, especially during volatile markets.
Pros of investing in natural gas ETFs
Here are some of the advantages of investing in natural gas ETFs:
- Inflation hedge: Like most commodities, natural gas ETFs tends to perform well during inflationary periods like 2022.
- Diversification: Natural gas ETFs can provide diversification to a portfolio of stocks and bonds thanks to its lower correlation.
- Accessibility: Natural gas ETFs are much easier for retail investors to buy and sell compared to individual natural gas futures contracts.
Cons of investing in natural gas ETFs
Some reasons to avoid natural gas ETFs include:
- High volatility: Natural gas prices tend to be very volatile, and natural gas ETFs holding natural gas futures can be as well.
- Expensive: Natural gas ETFs tend to charge very high MERs due to their use of futures contracts.
- Tracking error: Due to contango, natural gas ETFs holding futures can produce returns differing from the actual spot price of natural gas.
Are natural gas ETFs right for you?
Many unsuspecting investors have been burned by the high volatility, fees, and contango that many natural gas ETFs possess. For beginner investors, these investments may be unsuitable. They can be highly volatile and behave in unpredictable ways.
If you’re looking to speculate on natural gas prices over the short-term, then a natural gas ETF could be a way to gain exposure. If you need enhanced exposure, a leveraged natural gas ETF could be an alternative to using margin.
In any case, it’s important to critically assess your investment objectives and risk tolerance before determining whether or not a natural gas ETF is a suitable holding. Alternatively, investors can consider Canadian oil & gas ETFs or specific natural gas stocks.