Bangkok Post

IEA: Global oil market is rebalancin­g

Supply declines by 140,000 bpd in April

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LONDON: The global oil market is rebalancin­g and the pace at which supply and demand are falling into line is picking up, even if inventorie­s still fail to reflect the impact of Opec supply cuts, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency says.

In its monthly report, the IEA yesterday kept its global demand growth forecast for 2017 unchanged at 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd), because of slowdowns in previously robust consumer countries such as the United States, Germany and Turkey.

Commercial inventorie­s fell for a second straight month in March, by 32.9 million barrels to 3.025 billion barrels.

But for the first quarter as a whole, stocks in industrial­ised countries rose by 24.1 million barrels and the IEA said preliminar­y data suggested inventorie­s increased again in April.

“It has taken some time for stocks to reflect lower supply when volumes produced before output cuts by Opec and 11 non-Opec countries took effect are still being absorbed by the market,” the Parisbased IEA said.

In the first quarter of 2017, “we might not have seen a resounding return to deficits but this report confirms our recent message that rebalancin­g is essentiall­y here and, in the short term at least, is accelerati­ng”.

Global oil supply fell by 140,000 bpd in April to 96.17 million bpd, led by declines in nations outside the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, such as Canada.

But with strong production increases in the United States, Brazil and Kazakhstan, the IEA said non-Opec output would grow by 600,000 bpd this year.

Opec meets on May 25 to discuss an extension of the deal it reached with some of its major rivals, such as Russia, to cut oil output by a joint 1.8 million bpd in the first half of the year and force a drawdown in global inventorie­s.

On Monday, Russia and Saudi Arabia called for extending the output cuts until March 2018 to rein in a global crude glut, pushing up prices..

Kuwait’s oil minister, Essam al-Marzouq, yesterday backed the Saudi/Russian initiative.

With a nine-month extension now the minimum expectatio­n for the Opec meeting, the group has a lot of work to do to persuade its members and some non-Opec producers to back the move.

Opec member Iraq, whose production is growing fast, has said it will support renewing the deal only for six months.

The IEA, which advises Western government­s on energy policy, said if Opec maintained output at April’s 31.8 million bpd, and nothing changed elsewhere in the balance, there would be an implied global draw of 700,000 bpd in the second quarter.

“Adopting the same scenario approach for the second half of 2017, the stock draws are likely to be even greater,” the IEA said.

Higher output from Nigeria and Saudi Arabia offset lower flows from Libya and Iran in April, while compliance with Opec’s agreed 1.2-million-bpd cut remained robust at around 96 percent, the IEA said.

Opec crude production was down 535,000 bpd compared to April 2016, the largest year-on-year decline in nearly three years.

In terms of demand, the IEA said Chinese consumptio­n remained relatively strong, with a near-425,000-bpd gain in the first quarter of the year, compared with 2016.

The Indian government’s demonetisa­tion policy will likely lower that country’s consumptio­n this year. The IEA expects Indian demand growth to hover around 200,000 bpd.

In the United States, the top source for global crude supply growth, consumptio­n has weakened and the IEA forecast flat US demand this year.

The latest official US demand numbers for February showed the biggest decline in more than four years at 495,000 bpd.

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