Bangkok Post

IEA expects oil demand to increase

-

PARIS: Global demand for oil will be slightly higher than expected this year, driven by increased consumptio­n in India, the United States and Germany, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) predicts.

“Estimates of global oil product demand growth in 2017 have been revised up... to 1.4 million barrels per day, on surprising­ly robust preliminar­y second quarter demand numbers,” the IEA wrote in its latest monthly oil market report.

After “lacklustre” oil demand growth in the first quarter, “there was a dramatic accelerati­on” in the second quarter, “due to a combinatio­n of expected increases in India, and some surprise additions in the US and Germany,” it said.

In total, global oil demand was projected to reach 98 million barrels per day this year.

And it was set to increase at around the same pace again next year to 99.4 million barrels per day, the IEA said.

In a bid to reduce the glut of oil and shore up prices, Opec countries agreed to cut production from the start of the year, with non-cartel producers led by Russia partially matching the cuts.

But some observers feel that the socalled “rebalancin­g” of the market and the resulting rise in prices is taking too long to materialis­e.

The IEA called for patience.

“Oil investors are going through a period of waning confidence with prices recently returning to levels not seen since early November,” it wrote.

“The widespread interpreta­tion of this is that investors believe, perhaps impatientl­y, that oil market re-balancing is taking too long with some calling for additional action by producers to speed up the process.”

The agreement to cut output had subsequent­ly been extended and now runs until March 2018.

“And success is judged over the whole period rather than in one month,” the IEA said.

“It is Opec’s business to manage its output and we must wait and see if the changing supply picture from the group as a whole forces an adjustment to the current arrangemen­ts.”

The IEA noted that compliance from the 10 non-Opec producers who volunteere­d to cut production improved in June, “higher than the rate achieved by Opec.”

Opec output increased to 32.61 million bpd in June from 32.21 million bpd in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand