Business Day

Opec, watchdog at odds on oil demand, cleaner fuels

- Alex Lawler, Nerijus Adomaitis and Swati Verma

Producer group Opec and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA), the world’s most closely watched forecaster­s of oil demand growth, are further apart than they have been for at least 16 years in their views on fuel use, according to Reuters research.

The gap between the IEA, which represents industrial­ised countries, and Opec means the two are sending divergent signals to traders and investors on oil market strength in 2024 and, for the longer term, about the speed of the world’s transition to cleaner fuels.

In February, the IEA predicted demand will rise by 1.22-million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024, while in its February report Opec expected 2.25-million bpd. The difference is about 1% of world demand.

“The IEA has a very strong perception that the energy transition will move ahead at a much faster pace,” Neil Atkinson, a former head of the IEA’s oil markets division, said. “Both agencies have boxed themselves in with a position, which is why they have this enormous gulf in demand forecasts.”

To set the difference in context, Reuters analysed the changes each agency has made to its oil demand forecasts from 2008-23, and the first two months of this year.

The period was chosen to give a long enough time series to draw conclusion­s and because it included extreme volatility in oil demand, starting with the 2008 financial crisis and ending with the 2020 pandemic and subsequent demand recovery.

Internatio­nal oil futures hit an all-time high of almost $150 a barrel in July 2008, compared with about $80 now.

The analysis of 16 years of IEA and Opec monthly reports found the 1.03-million bpd gap in February was the biggest in per-barrel terms in that period.

The IEA, asked to comment on its 2024 forecast, said that this year’s slowdown amounted to a return to the growth trends seen before the pandemic, and the slowdown was already visible in oil deliveries data.

“We expect this to continue this year, with mobility indicators suggesting that road and air traffic are stabilisin­g,” the IEA said, adding it could not comment on other organisati­ons’ forecasts.

Opec did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

GREEN SHIFT

Opec and the IEA also disagree over the medium term. The IEA expects oil demand to peak by 2030 as the world switches to cleaner fuels. Opec dismisses the view and its forecasts to 2045 show no peak.

The IEA, formed 50 years ago as the industrial­ised world’s energy watchdog, has shifted its focus on oil and gas supply security to championin­g renewables and climate action. For some Opec members, this undermines its role as an impartial authority.

“They have moved from being a forecaster and assessor of the market to one practising political advocacy,” Saudi Arabia energy minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said last September.

IEA members are mostly big energy consumers and the government­s of many of them have decided to accelerate the developmen­t of renewable energy to accelerate the shift towards a low-carbon economy.

They were looking to their energy watchdog to show them how to get there, analysts said. Opec members by contrast, which depend on fossil fuel revenue, face potentiall­y catastroph­ic economic consequenc­es from a rapid transition away from oil.

The analysis found forecasts by the two bodies have tied statistica­lly in terms of forecast accuracy, making it hard to say which will be right based on the track record.

Reuters also gathered estimates from 26 analysts at banks and research firms of 2024 demand growth.

The mean of these estimates is 1.3-million bpd, or closer to the IEA view.

Of 20 analyst responses on the question of whether demand will peak by 2030, 12 analysts said no, suggesting Opec is seen as more likely to be right on this point.

UPWARD REVISIONS

Like all economic forecasts, oil demand prediction­s are subject to revision and affected by many events that are impossible to foresee. Data on physical oil use takes time to emerge, adding to the challenge.

According to the IEA, demand growth will halve in 2024 partly as a result of a booming electric vehicle fleet, though from January the agency had revised upwards the 2024 demand growth forecast for three straight months.

Amrita Sen, founder of Energy Aspects, said that the IEA tended to revise its demand upwards, as did Atkinson.

“I’d say the IEA’s oil demand forecasts keep getting revised higher,” Sen said. “Peak oil demand is likely to be higher than the IEA forecasts.”

The analysis found that in 2008-23 the IEA underestim­ated total demand in its initial forecast 56% of the time compared with 50% of the time by Opec.

Atkinson said that though both agencies have forecast demand developmen­ts accurately, he thought Opec was more likely to be right on the issue of demand peaking this decade.

PRODUCER GROUP AND INTERNATIO­NAL ENERGY AGENCY ARE SENDING DIVERGENT SIGNALS ON OIL MARKET STRENGTH

0PEC MEMBERS FACE POTENTIALL­Y CATASTROPH­IC CONSEQUENC­ES FROM A TRANSITION AWAY FROM OIL

 ?? /Reuters ?? Big oil: Opec secretary-general Haitham Al Ghais attends the Egypt Energy Show in Cairo, Egypt, in February 2019.
/Reuters Big oil: Opec secretary-general Haitham Al Ghais attends the Egypt Energy Show in Cairo, Egypt, in February 2019.

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