The Hindu - International

OPEC, IEA at most divided on oil demand since at least 2008

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Producer group OPEC and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, 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 the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries means the two are sending divergent signals to 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 this year, 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 difference 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 difference in context, Reuters analysed the changes each agency has made to its oil demand forecasts from 2008 to 2023, and the first two months of this year.

Reuters’ analysis of years of IEA and OPEC monthly reports found the 1.03 million bpd gap in February was the biggest in perbarrel terms in that period.

The IEA, asked about the gap between the two agencies’ 2024 forecasts and whether it saw its forecasts as more accurate than OPEC’s, said this year’s demand slowdown amounted to a return to the growth trends seen before the pandemic, and the slowdown is already visible in oil deliveries data.

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

OPEC, also asked to comment on the gap and whether it saw its forecasts as more accurate, said its 2023 demand growth forecast of 2.5 million bpd was only slightly below its initial number given in July 2022. “We have been very steady with our 2023 oil demand forecast. Many other forecaster­s started low and then continuall­y revised up their 2023 forecast,” OPEC’s Vienna secretaria­t said, without commenting on 2024.

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 that view.

IEA’s green shift

OPEC on Monday reiterated its forecast out to 2045 does not see a peak, citing expected growth outside industrial­ised Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t nations and “pushback on some initial netzero policies”.

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’s 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 and the shift to a lowcarbon economy.

They are looking to their energy watchdog to show them how to get there, analysts say. 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 the two bodies’ forecasts 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 firms 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.

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

 ?? REUTERS ?? Close call: IEA and OPEC forecasts about oil demand have tied statistica­lly in terms of forecast accuracy.
REUTERS Close call: IEA and OPEC forecasts about oil demand have tied statistica­lly in terms of forecast accuracy.

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