Khaleej Times

Oil price to start slow recovery in 2017: IEA

Spending on oil exploratio­n and equipment projected to drop by 17% after 24% cut last year

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paris — World oil prices are unlikely to rise from current levels before 2017, and even then their recovery will be slow as massive oil stocks feed into the market, the IEA said Monday.

“We must say that today’s oil market conditions do not suggest that prices can recover sharply in the immediate future — unless, of course, there is a major geopolitic­al event,” the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in its medium-term report, which looks five years ahead.

“Only in 2017 will we finally see oil supply and demand aligned but the enormous stocks being accumulate­d will act as a dampener on the pace of recovery in oil prices when the market, having balanced, then starts to draw down those stocks,” it said.

“While oil prices should start to rise gradually once the market begins rebalancin­g, the availabili­ty of resources that can be easily and quickly tapped will limit the scope of rallies,” the report said. The IEA acknowledg­ed that predicting the oil market “is today a task of enormous complexity”, saying experts were still grappling with the implicatio­ns of a dramatic drop in the oil price from over $100 per barrel in July 2014 to around $30 today. A year ago, analysts predicted that oil oversupply would end by late 2015, “but that view has proved very wide of the mark”, it admitted.

The IEA’s view is that supply will eventually be curtailed as investment cuts prompted by low prices translate into lower output. Spending on oil exploratio­n and equipment is projected to drop by 17 per cent this year after a 24 per cent cut in 2015 “which would be the first time since 1986 that upstream investment has fallen for two consecutiv­e years”, the IEA noted.

Demand for oil, meanwhile, will continue to increase, but at a weaker pace amid financial market turmoil and clear signs that “almost any economy you care to look at could see its GDP growth prospects downgraded”.

Global annual average demand growth over the next five years is expected at 1.2 million barrels per day (mb/d), down from a 1.6 mb/d increase seen in 2015 when demand received an initial boost from oil price falls.

 ?? Reuters ?? Three oil and gas rigs owned by Transocean Ltd sit in the Grand Harbor in Valletta, Malta. The IEA’s view is that supply will eventually be curtailed as investment cuts prompted by low prices translate into lower output. —
Reuters Three oil and gas rigs owned by Transocean Ltd sit in the Grand Harbor in Valletta, Malta. The IEA’s view is that supply will eventually be curtailed as investment cuts prompted by low prices translate into lower output. —

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