The Borneo Post

Big Oil faces possibilit­y of demand decline

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PARIS: Although crude prices have rebounded from the Coronaviru­s Disease 2019 (Covid19) crisis lows, oil execs and experts are starting to ask if the industry has crossed the Rubicon of peak demand.

he plunge in the price of crude oil during the first wave of Covid-19 lockdowns — futures prices briefly turned negative — was due to the drop in global demand as planes were parked on tarmacs and cars in garages.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) forecast that average daily oil demand will drop by eight million barrels per day this year, a decline of around eight percent from last year.

While the agency expects an unpreceden­ted rebound of 5.7 million barrels per day next year, it still forecasts overall demand will be lower than in 2019 owing to ongoing uncertaint­y in the airline sector.

Some are questionin­g whether demand will ever get back to 2019 levels.

“I don’t think we know how this is going to play out. I certainly don’t know,” BP’s new chief executive Bernard Looney said in May.

The Covid-19 pandemic was in full swing then with most planes grounded and white-collar workers giving up the commute to work from home.

“Could it be peak oil? Possibly. I would not write that off,” Looney told the Financial Times.

Summited?

The concept of peak oil has long generated speculatio­n.

Mostly, it has been focused on peak production, with experts forecastin­g that prices would reach astronomic­al levels as recoverabl­e oil in the ground runs out.

But in recent months, the concept of peak demand has come into vogue, with the Covid19 landing an uppercut into fuel demand for the transporta­tion sector followed by a knock-out punch from the transition to cleaner fuels.

Michael Bradshaw, professor at Warwick Business School, said environmen­tal groups are already lobbying to prevent the Paris agreements becoming another casualty of the pandemic, stressing the need for a Green New Deal for the recovery.

“If they are successful, demand for oil might never return to the peak we saw prior to Covid-19,” he said in comments to journalist­s.

The transport sector may never fully recover, Bradshaw posited.

“After the pandemic, we might have a different attitude to internatio­nal air travel or physically going into work,” he said.

Science fiction

Other experts say we haven’t reached the tipping point yet, and might not for a while.

“Many people have said, including some CEOs of some major companies, with the lifestyle changes now to teleworkin­g and others we may well see oil demand has peaked, and oil demand will go down,” IEA executive director Fatih Birol said recently.

“I don’t agree with that. Teleconfer­encing alone will not help us to reach our energy and climate goals, they can only make a small dent,” Firol added while unveiling a recent IEA report.

Moez Ajmi at consulting and auditing firm E&Y dismissed as ‘science fiction’ the idea that a definitive drop in oil demand could suddenly emerge.

He expects a slow recovery in demand even if Covid-19 leaves the global economy weakened.

That weakness would also likely slow adoption of greener fuels.

“It will take time for fossil fuels, which today still account for some 80 per cent of primary global consumptio­n to face real competitio­n” from rival energy sources, he said.

Meanwhile, the oil industry could face financing challenges.

Bronwen Tucker, an analyst at Oil Change Internatio­nal, says the industry is now under pressure from investors.

After “a pretty big wave of restrictio­ns on coal and some restrictio­ns on oil and gas, the risks to oil and gas investment right now feel a lot more salient,” she said.

The industry is already writing down the value of assets to face up to the new market reality of lower demand and prices.

Royal Dutch Shell said this past week that it will take a US$22 billion charge as it re-evaluates the value of its business in light of the Covid-19. Last month, rival BP reduced the worth of its assets by US$17.5 billion.

“This process has further to run, and we expect further large impairment­s to occur across the sector,” said Angus Rodger of specialist energy consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

I don’t think we know how this is going to play out. I certainly don’t know.

Bernard Looney

 ??  ?? Photo shows an aerial view of a crude oil storage facility is seen in Cushing, Oklahoma.
Photo shows an aerial view of a crude oil storage facility is seen in Cushing, Oklahoma.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Photo shows the Total petroleum refinery in Donges, western France.
— AFP photos Photo shows the Total petroleum refinery in Donges, western France.
 ??  ?? The logo of energy giant Royal Dutch Shell is pictured at a petrol station in London.
The logo of energy giant Royal Dutch Shell is pictured at a petrol station in London.
 ??  ?? In this file photo, a man stops to refuel his car at a petrol filling station in Paris on the 32nd day of a strict lockdown aimed at curbing the spread of the Covid19 pandemic, caused by Covid-19. Although crude prices have rebounded from Covid-19 crisis lows, oil execs and experts are starting to ask if the industry has crossed the Rubicon of peak demand.
In this file photo, a man stops to refuel his car at a petrol filling station in Paris on the 32nd day of a strict lockdown aimed at curbing the spread of the Covid19 pandemic, caused by Covid-19. Although crude prices have rebounded from Covid-19 crisis lows, oil execs and experts are starting to ask if the industry has crossed the Rubicon of peak demand.

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