San Antonio Express-News

IEA: Global oil demand hits record, prices may rise

- By Grant Smith

Global oil demand has surged to a record amid robust consumptio­n in China and elsewhere, threatenin­g to push prices higher, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said.

World fuel use averaged 103 million barrels a day for the first time in June and may soar even higher in August, the agency said in a report. As Saudi Arabia and its partners constrict supplies, oil markets are tightening significan­tly.

“Oil demand is scaling record highs, boosted by strong summer air travel, increased oil use in power generation and surging Chinese petrochemi­cal activity,” the Paris-based IEA said.

“Crude and products inventorie­s have drawn sharply” and “balances are set to tighten further into the autumn.”

Oil this week touched a sixmonth high above $88 a barrel in London amid the post-pandemic resurgence in fuel use and supply restraint by the Saudiled OPEC+ alliance. Brent futures eased back a little to trade below $87 on Friday.

The plunge in world oil demand during the Covid-19 crisis three years ago spurred speculatio­n that consumptio­n may be close to a peak as remote working gained in popularity and government­s sought to shift away from fossil fuels to avert catastroph­ic climate change.

But the IEA data shows that, despite growing evidence of a warming planet shown by this summer’s heat waves and wildfires in the Northern Hemisphere, oil use is stronger than ever.

China will account for 70% of this year’s demand growth, but surprising­ly resilient developed nations added to the latest surge.

The energy transition looks set to have an impact next year, when global demand growth will roughly halve to 1 million barrels a day due to improved vehicle efficiency and the adoption of electric cars, the IEA said.

But in the meantime, world markets are tightening, leaving oil inventorie­s in developed nations about 115 million barrels below their five-year average, according to the report.

Global stockpiles are set to deplete by a hefty 1.7 million barrels a day in the second half of the year, and preliminar­y data appears to confirm declines in July and August, the IEA said.

Major consuming nations have criticized the Saudis and their allies in OPEC+ for constricti­ng supplies, warning that a renewed inflationa­ry spike would squeeze consumers and endanger the global recovery.

Nonetheles­s, Riyadh has said it could deepen current cutbacks if necessary.

Output from the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners plunged last month to near a two-year low as the Saudis implemente­d a unilateral cut of 1 million barrels a day. Russia, a fellow member of the coalition, is also reducing exports.

The need for OPEC’S crude during the fourth quarter looks a little less pressing compared with last month’s report, as a slightly weaker demand outlook for the period and a little extra supply elsewhere shave the requiremen­t for OPEC production by 400,000 barrels a day.

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