IEA: Early Signs of Recovery Visible, But Oil Demand Still Set For Record Fall

Shadia Nasralla
Thursday, May 14, 2020

Oil demand is still set for a record fall in 2020, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Thursday, but it trimmed its forecast for the drop citing easing lockdown measures.

Demand is expected to fall by 8.6 million barrels per day (bpd), the IEA said in its monthly report, raising its estimate by 690,000 bpd compared to last month.

Around 2.8 billion people will be living under confinement measures aimed at containing the novel coronavirus at the end of May, down from 4 billion in April, the Paris-based IEA said.

In revising its forecast, the energy watchdog cited stronger-than-expected mobility in some European countries and the United States as well as higher Chinese demand as it recovers from the virus outbreak.

"Economic activity is beginning a gradual-but-fragile recovery. However, major uncertainties remain. The biggest is whether governments can ease the lockdown measures without sparking a resurgence of COVID-19 outbreaks," it said.

Led by the United States and Canada, producers outside the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies like Russia, the so-called OPEC+ grouping, saw a fall in April output by 3 million bpd compared to the start of the year.

The IEA predicted that by the end of 2020, the United States would be the biggest single contributor to supply reductions, down 2.8 million bpd year on year.

"It is on the supply side where market forces have demonstrated their power and shown that the pain of lower prices affects all producers," the IEA said.

But IEA director Fatih Birol said on a call with reporters that recently announced output cuts by major Gulf Arab producers would likely not be enough to balance global markets.

"I am happy to see Saudi Arabia, the Emirates and Kuwait - on top of their existing commitments - are now going to make further cuts. I do welcome them. Whether or not this is enough, I do not think so," Birol said on the call after the IEA released its monthly report.

"We are seeing the early signs of a start of recovery, but it is far too early to say we are soon going to reach the rebalancing of the markets," he added, renewing a call to OPEC+ countries to consider further cuts.

The shortage of oil storage capacity worldwide and especially in the United States has addled markets and weighed on crude prices in recent weeks, but the IEA predicted a recovery was likely approaching.

It predicted 5.5 million bpd of a "massive" implied increase in crude oil stocks of 9.7 million bpd in the first half of the year would be drawn down in the second half, assuming no resurgence of the virus and full commitment to production cuts.

(Additional reporting by Shadia Nasralla; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

Categories: Energy Activity Production Oil Price

Related Stories

Oil Rises as Fragile Middle East Ceasefire Sustains Supply Risks

Nam Cheong Locks In Two OSV Charters amid Tight Southeast Asia Supply

Sunda, Finder Target Shared Rig for Timor-Leste Offshore Drilling

France Leads 15-Country Effort to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

Oil Shoots Over $110 as Trump's Iran Deadline Looms

IEA: Current Oil And Gas Crisis Exceeds Past Shocks Combined

Oil Holds Steady as Supply Risks from War Persist

Iran War Reshapes Global LNG Trade

INPEX Extends Pertamina LNG Pact, Signs Upstream MoU in Southeast Asia

Qatar Stops LNG Output, Other O&G Fields Shut as War Rages

Current News

Israel Orders Restart of Ops at Karish Offshore Gas Platform

Oil Rises as Fragile Middle East Ceasefire Sustains Supply Risks

Glencore, Taiwan’s CPC Charter Tankers as Hormuz Reopens

Nam Cheong Locks In Two OSV Charters amid Tight Southeast Asia Supply

Sunda, Finder Target Shared Rig for Timor-Leste Offshore Drilling

France Leads 15-Country Effort to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

Oil Tumbles, Stocks Surge on Middle East Ceasefire

ABL Transports Northern Endeavour FPSO to Recycling Yard

Fire at ONGC's Offshore Platform Injures 10, Operations Normalized

CPC Oil Exports via Black Sea Stable After Attack Reports

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com