La Nouvelle Tribune

Global Oil Demand Undermined by China Lockdowns, IEA Says

Oil demand has remained surprising­ly robust in other nations despite high inflation

- By Will Horner The Wall Street Journal. Featured article licensed from our partner The Wall Street Journal.

Weaker demand for oil in China, as the economy faces stop-start Covid-19 lockdowns, is outweighin­g robust crude demand elsewhere in the world and will crimp oil demand growth this year, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said Wednesday.

In its oil-market report, the IEA lowered its forecasts for Chinese oil demand by 400,000 barrels a day this year to 15 million barrels a day, 420,000 barrels a day less than last year. For 2023, the Paris-based agency lowered its China demand forecasts by 300,000 barrels a day, but still expects demand to rise to 16 million barrels a day as Covid-19 pandemic restrictio­ns are relaxed. China’s economy, the world’s second-largest, is proving to be the global laggard in oil demand. Among other nations, oil demand has remained surprising­ly robust despite high inflation, rising interest rates and slowing economic growth. Oil demand in the U.S. is proving stronger than expected, the

An oil refinery in Houston. PHOTO: BRANDON BELL/GETTY IMAGES

IEA said, while Middle Eastern demand is also strong as hot temperatur­es prompt above-average demand for oil-fired electricit­y generation.

Meanwhile, in Europe, soaring gas prices—prompted by Russia’s halt to flows through the Nord Stream pipeline—are adding greater-than-expected levels of demand for oil as power plants switch to crude as a cheaper energy source. That trend should account for a 700,000 barrel a day boost for oil during the six months through March 2023, the IEA said, roughly 150,000 barrels a day more than it was expecting in last month’s report.

While most nations have all but removed their pandemicer­a movement restrictio­ns, China’s zero-Covid policy sees it continue to impose strict lockdowns in response to new cases, underminin­g economic growth and oil demand. China’s demand from domestic oil sources is suffering the most from the lockdowns, the IEA said, lowering its forecasts for the nation’s domestic demand by 890,000 barrels a day.

Still, China’s struggles are being countered by strong demand elsewhere and should have a limited impact on global oil balances, the IEA said. The agency lowered its global oil-demand growth forecasts for 2022 by a modest 100,000 barrels a day to 2 million barrels a day. The IEA expects total demand this year of 99.7 million barrels, in line with last month’s estimates.

The agency left its 2023 oil èdemand growth forecast unchanged at 2.1 million barrels a day and did the same with its total demand forecasts which stand at 101.8 million barrels a day. Concerns about weaker economic growth and oil demand have dragged oil prices lower in recent months. Brent crude, the internatio­nal oil-price benchmark, has fallen 25% over the past three months.

The drop in oil prices was also underminin­g Russia’s oil-export revenues, which fell by $1.2 billion in August, to $17.7 billion, the IEA said. Soaring oil prices earlier this year sent the nation’s oil revenues sharply higher despite it exporting fewer barrels, raising concerns that Western sanctions weren’t having the desired effect of underminin­g Moscow’s Ukraine war chest.

In a report Tuesday, the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries left its own global demand forecasts steady at roughly 100 million barrels a day this year and 103 million barrels a day in 2023. OPEC’s own analysts have been less concerned about signs of flagging oil demand, despite such concerns driving sharp drops in oil prices. The cartel says demand concerns have been overblown and drops in oil prices heightened by market volatility and a lack of liquidity.

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