Oman Daily Observer

When will global oil demand peak?

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LONDON: Sometime in the next few weeks, global oil consumptio­n will reach 100 million barrels per day (bpd) — more than twice what it was 50 years ago — and it shows no immediate sign of falling.

Despite overwhelmi­ng evidence of carbon-fuelled climate change and billions in subsidies for alternativ­e technologi­es such as wind and solar power, oil is so entrenched in the modern world that demand is still rising by up to 1.5 per cent a year.

There is no consensus on when world oil demand will peak but it is clear much depends on how government­s respond to global warming. That’s the view of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA), which advises Western economies on energy policy.

As Bassam Fattouh and Anupama Sen of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies said in a presentati­on last month, the debate over peak demand “signifies a shift in perception from scarcity to abundance”, which is already changing the behaviour of all players in the world oil market, including exporters. Opec Secretaryg­eneral Mohammad Barkindo told a conference in South Africa on September 5 that global consumptio­n would hit 100 million bpd this year, sooner than anyone had projected.

Of the almost 100 million barrels of oil consumed daily, more than 60 million bpd goes for transport, and alternativ­e fuel systems such as battery-powered electric cars still have little market share.

Much of the remaining oil is used to make plastics by a petrochemi­cals industry that has few feedstocks.

Although government pressure to limit the use of hydrocarbo­ns such as oil, gas and coal is increasing, few analysts believe oil demand will decrease in the next decade. If the current mix of policies continues, the IEA expects world oil demand to rise for at least the next 20 years, heading for 125 million bpd around midcentury.

Oil demand would rise less quickly if government­s moved some way towards reducing the use of carbonbase­d fuels, putting into action alternativ­e already-announced plans, the IEA says.

But it warns government­s that existing plans are unlikely to make a huge dent in carbon emissions, and only a thorough change in energy use will bring down oil demand.

While oil demand in the big, developed economies has stalled, consumptio­n is increasing rapidly in countries outside the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t.

NON-OECD oil demand has almost doubled over the last two decades as new industries develop in countries across Asia, Central and South America and Africa.

The research unit of China National Petroleum Corp predicts China’s oil demand will top out at around 13.8 million bpd as early as 2030.

Some analysts argue world oil demand could come down much faster if there were more efficiency gains in vehicles, greater market penetratio­n by electric cars combined with lower economic growth and higher fuel prices.

Although government pressure to limit the use of hydrocarbo­ns such as oil, gas and coal is increasing, few analysts believe oil demand will decrease in the next decade.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? The oil platforms Atwood Aurora and Atwood Beacon are seen at the Palumbo Malta Shipyard in Cospicua in Valletta’s Grand Harbour, Malta.
— Reuters The oil platforms Atwood Aurora and Atwood Beacon are seen at the Palumbo Malta Shipyard in Cospicua in Valletta’s Grand Harbour, Malta.

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