The Star Malaysia

Nevermind those EVS, oil demand keeps growing

- By JAVIER BLAS Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commoditie­s. The views expressed here are the writer’s own.

LIKE clockwork, the commoditie­s market worries in May about the strength of oil demand heading into the northern hemisphere summer holiday.

Nervousnes­s about the seasonal pickup in oil consumptio­n abounds. It happened in 2023, and it’s happening again this year. But as before, traders’ concerns are misplaced: Oil demand growth is doing just fine.

The anxiety is reflected in the price of Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, which has dropped to less than US$85 a barrel in recent days, down from about US$90 a barrel in April.

With the Opec+ oil cartel meeting on June 1 to decide whether to prolong production cuts, the status of global demand matters. The group should look beyond the current noise and see that consumptio­n remains firm.

Oil pares gains

Admittedly, there are pockets of demand weakness. The middle distillate­s fuel segment, which includes diesel and heating oil, have seen soft consumptio­n so far this year.

But that’s largely due to a warm winter in the northern hemisphere, which reduced heating needs, rather than underlying economic malaise.

In the diesel market, the biggest problem isn’t demand, but supply: Renewable diesel and bio-diesel are taking market share more rapidly than expected, in the process magnifying the diesel glut.

In February, the last month with monthly data available, biodiesel and renewable diesel accounted for about 8.5% of total US diesel consumptio­n. In 2020, the market share of both was under 1%.

Overlooked, however, are the pockets of demand strength.

Petrol consumptio­n is rising beyond what many had anticipate­d even as electric vehicles become more popular.

Notwithsta­nding the increase in EV sales, there are now more cars than ever powered by internal-combustion engines. And pump prices are at levels that don’t discourage consumptio­n, particular­ly in emerging markets.

Only a year ago, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA ) ventured that global petrol demand peaked in 2019, and EVS meant that consumptio­n would never return to pre-pandemic levels.

Now we know better: Already last year, gasoline demand surpassed that, and in 2024 it’s growing even further.

Jet fuel is the other refined product doing better than expected despite the widespread adoption of more fuel-efficient planes.

For the last 18 months or so, those efficiency gains put a brake on jet-fuel demand.

But now the number of flights and, importantl­y, the quantity of miles flown have increased so much above 2019 levels as interconti­nental travel resurges that jet-fuel consumptio­n is for the first time matching seasonal pre-covid-19 levels.

In early May, the number of flights was 5% above the same time of 2019, while the number of flight-miles was nearly 10% higher, according to Airportia, a data provider.

When you add it all up, oil demand growth is still looking healthy for 2024. Granted, it won’t advance as much as the uber-bullish forecaster­s had hoped. In particular, Opec’s own prediction of a 2.2 million-barrel-a-day gain looks farfetched – if not absurd.

Yet, it’s on track to reach the far more reasonable 1.2 million gain anticipate­d by the IEA, setting a record of more than 103 million barrels a day.

Thirsty for oil

If anything, the balance of risk is skewed toward demand growing this year by more than the IEA currently expects. A lot more? Not much, but a gain of 1.3 million to 1.5 million appears at hand.

Healthy demand notwithsta­nding, the market seems to be struggling with two problems.

The first is optics: While growth is robust, even strong, it’s much slower than in 2021, 2022 and 2023, the years of recovery from the 2020 pandemic-induced collapse.

The IEA, which has overhyped the slowdown for months, put it in its right context in April: “Despite the decelerati­on that is forecast, this level of oil demand growth remains largely in line with the pre-covid trend, even amid muted expectatio­ns for global economic growth this year and increased deployment of clean-energy technologi­es.”

From 1991 to 2023, global demand for crude grew an average of 1.05 million barrels a day.

Excluding the Covid-19 impact – and the recovery from it – oil-demand growth has averaged 1.18 million barrels a day over the last 30 years – in line with the IEA’S forecast of 1.2 million for 2024 which, technicall­y, signals an above-average number.

The second is over reliance on US weekly oil data, which is inherently noisy – the typical statistica­l tradeoff between speed and completene­ss.

The Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, which compiles oil statistics for the federal government, has been struggling for several years to nail the true level of consumptio­n.

Weekly data moves the market, but when the numbers are revised with the publicatio­n of monthly statistics – almost invariably higher – fewer pay attention.

Consider February, the latest fully revised: Using weekly statistics, the EIA estimated US oil demand initially at about 19.52 million barrels a day for the month, lower than a year before, raising alarms in the market.

But final data, which was released only a few days ago, showed a very different reality: demand was higher year-on-year, reaching the quite punchy level of 19.95 million barrels a day.

The oil bulls still have reason to worry: With Opec+ trying to keep prices as close as possible to US$100 a barrel, non-opec supply, including from biofuels, keeps surging. But the focus on demand weakness is misplaced. — Bloomberg

 ?? ?? Still rising: a worker refuels a vehicle in south africa. In 2023, global petrol consumptio­n surpassed levels before the Covid pandemic. — Bloomberg
Still rising: a worker refuels a vehicle in south africa. In 2023, global petrol consumptio­n surpassed levels before the Covid pandemic. — Bloomberg

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