The Citizen (KZN)

Oil demand won’t fully recover until 2022

-

Global oil demand will rebound next year as the world emerges from the coronaviru­s pandemic, but won’t fully recover until 2022 at the earliest, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said.

Fuel use around the world will remain 2.5% lower next year than last year, largely because of “the dire situation of the aviation sector”, the Paris-based agency said in its first detailed assessment of 2021.

The projection­s add to a fragile outlook for the oil industry, coming a day after BP wrote off billions in assets on concern over long-term demand. Still, the report contains some good news for producers.

The first half of this year is “ending on a more optimistic note” because demand losses during lockdowns to curb the spread of coronaviru­s weren’t as severe as expected, it said. Output cuts by Opec+ and shutdowns in the US should put the market into deficit in 2021, depleting the massive 1.5 billion-barrel surge in inventorie­s seen so far this year.

Oil prices were trading near $40 a barrel in London yesterday, double the levels seen in late April, as economic activity resumes and the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies slash supply.

The IEA, which advises most major economies on energy policy, bolstered its demand estimate for the second quarter by 2.1 million barrels a day, tempering some of the massive drop.

Nonetheles­s, world crude consumptio­n is still on track for a record contractio­n of 8.1 million barrels a day this year. While it will climb by 5.7 million barrels a day next year, the average of 97.4 million a day will remain 2.4 million barrels a day below 2019 levels.

For now at least, the physical oil market is tightening. Stockpiles are on track to diminish rapidly over the next six months, and – in theory – decrease during each quarter of next year, according to the agency’s forecasts.

Opec+ made a “strong start” to its latest round of output curbs last month, delivering 89% of its pledge to cut 9.7 million barrels a day, the IEA said. Earlier this month, the alliance agreed to press on with the strategy.

Next year, global demand is on track to exceed supply, with the projected recovery in oil production to be less than a third of the increase in fuel use, at 1.7 million barrels a day.

That could change however, if the Opec+ coalition is tempted to revive output as consumptio­n rebounds or if rising prices reinvigora­te American shale drillers, the IEA cautioned. –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa