Arab Times

Surging US output a ‘concern’ for oil market: OPEC

World oil demand to grow faster than expected in 2018

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PARIS, Feb 12, (AFP): Oil prices, long battered by a global glut in supply, have been rising recently as the market returns to balance on the back of a landmark deal between producers to throttle output, but surging shale production in the United States could throw a spanner in the works, OPEC said on Monday.

Crude prices fell as low as $35 per barrel at the start of 2016, but they have been rising since, reaching a three-year high of more than $70 per barrel last month, “on signs that production adjustment­s by OPEC and non-OPEC participat­ing countries are balancing the market,” the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) wrote in its latest monthly market report.

Strong economic data — notably from the US and Germany — as well as geopolitic­al tensions in the Middle East have also helped support prices, the cartel said.

But it cautioned that “surging US production remained a concern”.

OPEC countries and other oilproduci­ng countries, such as Russia, agreed at the end of 2016 to cut back production to combat the global glut in oil.

At a meeting in Vienna at the end of November, they agreed to extend that deal until the end of 2018.

But with crude prices on the rise, shale producers, particular­ly in the US — who are not party to the deal and whose overheads are lower than the oil majors — are ramping up output to cash in on the boom.

And that, in turn, could jeopardise the delicate balance that the market has now reached, OPEC said.

Shale production is controvers­ial, because in order to extract oil and gas, a high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals is blasted deep undergroun­d to release hydrocarbo­ns trapped between layers of rock.

And environmen­talists argue that the process — known as fracking, or hydraulic fracturing technology — may contaminat­e ground water and even cause small earthquake­s.

Turning to the outlook for global oil demand, OPEC predicted that it would continue to grow this year as economic recovery gathers pace.

The cartel projected that global demand for oil would rise to 98.6 million barrels per day in 2018, from 97.01 million bpd last year.

That represente­d an upward revision from earlier forecasts and “mainly reflected the positive economic outlook,” OPEC said.

Transporta­tion fuels — namely gasoline, jet fuel and diesel oil — were anticipate­d to provide the bulk of oil demand growth in 2018, propelled by steady vehicle sales in the US, China and India, the cartel said.

And another factor would be “capacity additions, as well as expansions in petrochemi­cal sector projects ... mainly in the US, and to a lesser extent in China.”

At the same time, a number of factors were also expected to weigh on oil demand, such as substituti­on with other fuels, a steady increase in efficiency gains, and a reduction in subsidies.

“Finally, the degree of digitaliza­tion and technologi­cal developmen­t in various sectors is also expected to relatively cap oil demand growth in 2018,” OPEC said. This file photo shows the sign on a branch of Barclays Bank in London. British prosecutor­s have charged Barclays Bank Plc with illegally providing a $3 billion loan to Qatar as it sought an investment that helped the bank avoid a government bailout at the height of the financial crisis. The Serious Fraud Office on Feb 12, charged Barclays’ operating unit with unlawful financial assistance for giving the loan to Qatar Holding LLC in 2008‚ for the purpose of directly or indirectly acquiring shares in Barclays Plc. (AP)

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