Austin American-Statesman

OPEC recognizes scale of shale boom

- By Grant Smith Bloomberg News

OPEC for the first time is forecastin­g that new oil supplies from its rivals will exceed growth in demand this year as the U.S. industry thrives.

The Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised its expectatio­n for supply growth from the U.S. and other producers for a fourth consecutiv­e month, according to its monthly market report.

The outlook suggests efforts by the group and Russia to clear a global glut by cutting supply are backfiring, as new production emerges, particular­ly in the U.S.

Oil rallied to a three-year high in January as the supply curbs by OPEC and Russia drain a surplus unleashed by a boom in U.S. shale oil.

Prices have since retreated with the American shale industry continuing to flourish, propelling output to record levels.

While global oil demand will climb by 1.6 million barrels a day this year, more than previously thought, that can be covered by an increase of 1.66 million barrels a day of supplies from outside OPEC, the organizati­on said.

It raised non-OPEC supply growth forecast by 260,000 barrels a day in the latest edition, and that from the U.S. by about 12 percent to 1.46 million a day.

As a result, OPEC’s ongoing cuts won’t be as effective in clearing the rest of the inventory surplus, the data showed. The cartel will be required to supply about 200,000 barrels a day less than anticipate­d in last month’s report.

By changing its projection­s, OPEC is catching up with other forecaster­s like the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, the institutio­n that advises oil-consuming nations. The IEA’s estimate of non-OPEC growth in 2018 is still higher, at about 1.8 million barrels a day.

Nonetheles­s, the report showed that OPEC’s supply curbs are continuing to shrink the global glut as most members implement their pledged cutbacks. Surplus oil inventorie­s in developed nations have plunged by 85 percent from the start of last year, to stand at about 50 million barrels in January.

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