Arab Times

Global oil inventorie­s shrinking: IEA

Agency raises 2017 demand growth

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LONDON, Sept 13, (RTRS): The global oil surplus is beginning to shrink due to strongerth­an-expected European and US demand growth, as well as production declines in OPEC and non-OPEC countries, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said on Wednesday.

The agency, which coordinate­s energy policies of industrial nations, raised its 2017 global oil demand growth estimate to 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd) from 1.5 million bpd.

“OECD demand growth continues to be stronger than expected, particular­ly in Europe and the US,” the Paris-based IEA said.

“Based on recent bets made by investors, expectatio­ns are that markets are tightening and that prices will rise, albeit very modestly,” the IEA said.

Robust demand in industrial­ised countries was a key factor behind global demand growing 2.3 million bpd in the second quarter, the highest quarterly year-on-year rise since mid-2015.

Supply

On the supply side, global oil output fell by 0.72 million bpd in August due to unplanned outages and scheduled maintenanc­e in OPEC member Libya as well as non-OPEC states such as Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Mexico, as well as in the North Sea.

It was the first fall in global production in four months.

OPEC’s crude output fell in August for the first time in five months on renewed turmoil in Libya, with the cartel’s production decreasing by 0.21 million bpd to 32.67 million bpd.

The 12 members of OPEC bound by a supply-cutting pact raised their compliance to 82 percent in August from 75 percent in July. Their compliance for the year so far was 86 percent.

As a result of output declines and stronger demand, global oil stocks are beginning to rebalance, according to

the IEA.

“OECD commercial stocks were unchanged in July at 3.016 billion barrels, when they normally increase,” the IEA said.

The global surplus of crude and

stocks over the five-year average fell to 190 million barrels. OPEC cut its output in January 2017 by 1.8 million bpd to help inventorie­s return to a 5-year average and prop up prices.

“OECD product stocks were only 35

million barrels above the five-year average at end-July,” the IEA said.

“Depending on the pace of recovery for the US refining industry post-Harvey, very soon OECD product stocks could fall to, or even below, the fiveyear

level,” it said referring to Hurricane Harvey which hit the United States two weeks ago.

With ongoing rebalancin­g, the IEA raised its call on OPEC’s oil by 0.1 million bpd for both 2017 and 2018.

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