The National - News

Economic rebound bolsters oil demand in spite of higher crude prices, TotalEnerg­ies chief says

- Sarmad Khan

The sharp rebound in the global economy from the Covid-19 pandemic has brought greater demand for oil than expected and driven prices higher, the head of French energy major TotalEnerg­ies said.

Patrick Pouyanne, chairman and chief executive of TotalEnerg­ies, told the Energy Intelligen­ce Forum that the recovery had brought “high growth ... too high”.

“I think the global system is not designed to absorb suddenly a 6 per cent or 7 per cent growth,” Mr Pouyanne said. “This is a short-term impact and we will get out of it.

“Opec in the oil market is playing a certain role, very prudent, very reasonable.”

The global economy has bounced back strongly and is expected to expand 6 per cent this year, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said in July. The IMF will release its new global forecast next week in its updated World Economic Outlook update. Central banks in some developed economies are guarded because of rising inflations, which has led to a sharp rise in food prices. Shipping costs have also surged.

The effect of the economic bounce back has not only affected the energy market. “We see that in many commoditie­s,” Mr Pouyanne said. “The global supply chain is not designed to accommodat­e such growth.”

Despite the spread of the Delta coronaviru­s strain, demand in 2021 is expected to grow by 6 million barrels per day, with global consumptio­n hitting 96.7 million bpd, according to Opec data released in September.

The oil producers’ group expects demand for 2022 to exceed pre-pandemic levels, reaching 100.8 million bpd.

The production is also rising this year as the Opec+ group of producers, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, is bringing 2 million bpd back to the markets in 2021. The group stuck to its plan to increase production by 400,000 bpd of supply for November, which pushed oil prices even higher.

Oil prices climbed on Tuesday, with US crude hitting its highest since 2014 and Brent, the benchmark for more than half of the world’s crude, rising to a three-year high.

Brent was trading 1.77 per cent higher to 82.70 per barrel at 10.13pm UAE time on Tuesday, while the WTI rose 1.88 per cent to 79.08 per barrel. Brent fell 0.56 per cent to $82.10 while WTI fell by 0.63 per cent to trade at $78.43 at 3pm UAE time yesterday.

Mr Pouyanne said high gas prices from strong demand, especially from Asia markets and China, have also driven oil prices as customers look to alternativ­e fuels for power.

The energy transition pressure is also at play in the market as some of the countries driving the gas prices are turning from coal to gas, he said.

Although demand for oil is on the rise, producers are struggling to lift production amid a drop in investment­s as they cut capital expenditur­e.

“You have pressure to invest less, not only because of energy transition but Covid as well,” Mr Pouyanne said.

“I suspect it might continue … it might be longer than we think. The energy system is a complex system and people should understand that everything is interconne­cted.”

Opec expects oil to dominate the global energy mix until 2045, as energy demand is set to increase to 352 million barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2045 from 275.4 million boepd in 2020.

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