Deccan Chronicle

IEA flags rising non-Opec output, warmer weather

Oil inventorie­s in the world’s richest nations saw a dip of 40 million barrels in Sept.

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London, Nov. 14: Global oil demand growth looks likely to increase more slowly over the coming months, as warmer temperatur­es cut consumptio­n, which may tilt the market back into surplus in the first half of next year, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said on Tuesday.

In its monthly report, IEA cut its oil demand forecast by 1,00,000 barrels per day (bpd) for this year and next, to an estimated 1.5 million bpd in 2017 and 1.3 million bpd in 2018.

Geopolitic­al tension in the Middle East and intermitte­nt supply outages in the likes of Nigeria and Iraq have pushed oil above $60 a barrel for the first time since 2015, while global inventorie­s have fallen, prompting many market watchers to raise their price forecasts.

“Does it mean the market has found a ‘new normal’ where the accepted floor might have moved from $50/bbl to $60/bbl? This might be a tempting view, assuming supply disturbanc­es will continue and tensions in the Middle East will not ease,” the IEA said.

“However, if these problems

Does it mean the market has found a ‘new normal’ where the accepted floor might have moved from $50/bbl to $60/bbl? This might be a tempting view, assuming supply disturbanc­es will continue and tensions in the Middle East will not ease — INTERNATIO­NAL ENERGY AGENCY

do prove to be temporary, a fresh look at the fundamenta­ls confirms the view we expressed last month that the market balance in 2018 does not look as tight as some would like, and there is not in fact a ‘new normal’.”

The IEA noted that output by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was down by 830,000 bpd year-on-year in October, although demand for the group’s crude is expected to fall to 32.6 million bpd in the fourth quarter of this year and to 32.0 million bpd in the first quarter of 2018.

Compliance by the group with its joint 1.8-millionbpd output cut with 10 partners was 96 per cent in October, the highest since the supply-reduction deal took effect in January.

The biggest threat to market balances, aside from a tempering in demand, is the growth in supply from non-OPEC nations.

“Even after some modest reductions to growth, nonOPEC production will follow this year’s 7,00,000-bpd growth with 1.4 million bpd of additional production in 2018 and next year’s demand growth will struggle to match this,” IEA said.“This is why, absent any geopolitic­al premium, we may not have seen a ‘new normal’ for oil prices.”

Oil inventorie­s in the richest nations fell by 40 million barrels in September, breaking below 3 billion barrels for the first time in two years, driven in part by Hurricane Harvey, which shuttered much US refining capacity in August.

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