Oman Daily Observer

Oil consumptio­n tracking is all about Asia

- JOHN KEMP

Oil market analysts must make sense of a bewilderin­g array of statistics about production, consumptio­n and inventorie­s, compiled and published with varying definition­s and degrees of accuracy and timeliness. The challenge is to form an accurate and nuanced picture of the whole market capable of generating useful forecasts, without becoming lost in the insignific­ant details. The World Bank identifies around 200 economies in the world, but on the consumptio­n side, at least, only a handful are individual­ly important for market analysis.

The oil market is best thought of as a complex adaptive system. Complex systems are “large networks of components with no central control and simple rules of operation that give rise to complex collective behaviour.”

From the demand side of the oil market, however, the only countries worth tracking individual­ly are those with consumptio­n large enough to affect the market as a whole and changing fast enough to alter equilibriu­m.

Just ten countries account for well over half of global oil consumptio­n and threequart­ers of the incrementa­l growth over the last decade, and these are the ones it is crucial to follow closely.

Other countries are too small to have an individual impact, though they can make a difference in groups when consumptio­n changes collective­ly in response to common global influences such as price spikes and recession.

The most important influence on global oil consumptio­n growth comes from China and India, which are large and fastgrowin­g consumers.

China’s oil consumptio­n hit 13.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2018 and had grown by an average of 5.5 per cent per year over the previous decade, according to data from BP.

India’s oil consumptio­n hit 5.1 million bpd in 2018 and had increased by an average of 5.1 per cent over the previous ten years.

China and India accounted for 19 per cent of all oil consumptio­n worldwide last year and 58 per cent of all consumptio­n growth over the last decade.

The two Asian giants play an increasing­ly dominant role in consumptio­n analysis and stand in a category of their own.

The United States is next in importance, with consumptio­n of 20.5 million bpd, roughly 50 per cent higher than China and 300 per cent higher than India, but with growth of just 0.5 per cent per year in 2008-2018.

The United States accounts for roughly 20 per cent of global consumptio­n, slightly larger than China and India combined, but its slow rate of growth means it has a much less decisive impact on price formation.

(US influence on oil prices is felt mostly from the production side, as a result of its role as the world’s largest and fastest growing oil supplier).

Beyond the United States, come Saudi Arabia, Brazil, South Korea and possibly Russia, all medium-sized oil consumers which exhibited fast growth in 2008-2018.

Finally, Japan and Germany, mediumsize­d oil consumers which exhibited relatively rapid rates of declining oil use over the last decade.

Canada is a similar-sized oil consumer but exhibited only very slow growth in 2008-2018, making it relatively unimportan­t analytical­ly.

These ten countries accounted for 60 per cent of all global consumptio­n in 2018 and 76 per cent of all consumptio­n growth in 2008-2018.

Tracking global oil consumptio­n is mostly about following closely what is happening in these key consuming countries. The remaining 190 economies consumed 40 per cent of global oil but accounted for less than a quarter of the decade growth.

These economies are too small to have a significan­t influence on oil consumptio­n and prices individual­ly, though they can have important effects in aggregate.

Oil price spikes and slumps have a synchronis­ed and significan­t impact on consumptio­n on these other economies, big enough to help move the market.

Global and regional business cycles also tend to have a common impact on consumptio­n in these economies that can be significan­t in aggregate.

And commodity price cycles (including both oil and non-oil commoditie­s) can have a significan­t common impact on commodity-dependent exporting countries that shows up in their collective oil consumptio­n. — Reuters

JUST TEN COUNTRIES ACCOUNT FOR WELL OVER HALF OF GLOBAL OIL CONSUMPTIO­N AND THREE-QUARTERS OF THE INCREMENTA­L GROWTH OVER THE LAST DECADE, AND THESE ARE THE ONES IT IS CRUCIAL TO FOLLOW CLOSELY

 ?? — Reuters ?? Boats sail past Pulau Bukom oil refinery along the southern coast of Singapore.
— Reuters Boats sail past Pulau Bukom oil refinery along the southern coast of Singapore.

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