The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Oil industry sounds alarm on coronavirus dent in demand

Mon, 14th Sep 2020 16:38

By Noah Browning

LONDON, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Persistent damage to the global
economy from the coronavirus pandemic will hollow out demand for
oil more than previously thought, major industry figures said on
Monday.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC), energy giant BP and commodities trading giant
Vitol all made grim forecasts as rising rates of COVID-19
infections sap hopes for quick recovery.

OPEC said in its monthly report that world oil demand would
fall by 9.46 million barrels per day (bpd) this year, a decline
sharper by 400,000 bpd than predicted in August.

The producer club bumped up its forecast slightly for
developed countries, but cut its outlook for Asian countries
beyond China "on the back of a slowdown in economic activity due
to the rising COVID-19 infection cases".

BP, in its annual energy outlook projected that in its most
conservative scenario, the pandemic would slash oil demand by
about 3 million bpd by 2025 and 2 million bpd by 2050.

In two more aggressive scenarios modelling two more rapid
global pivots away from fossil fuels, the demand erosion would
be far deeper.

Vitol Chief Executive Russell Hardy sounded a more positive
note, telling a global petroleum conference that after oil
storage peaks at the nadir of the pandemic, the market was
"slowly chewing through that excess inventory".

But the trading house's global head of research Giovanni
Serio said that a dent in demand caused by a continuing rise in
cases or a second wave presents "the most likely shock that the
oil market needs to be considering in the next 12 to 24 months".

The International Energy Agency is set to update its
projections for global oil demand in its monthly report due on
Tuesday, after an IEA official said this month that the market
appeared to be stuck between a stalled recovery and the absence
of any major new lockdowns.
(Reporting by Noah Browning;
Editing by Alexander Smith)

Related Shares

More News
27 May 2024 11:00

BP, EOG Resources in talks to jointly develop Trinidad gas field

May 27 (Reuters) - Oil major BP and U.S. shale producer EOG Resources are in discussions to jointly develop a natural gas field off the coast of Tri...

25 May 2024 17:56

South Africa's Central Energy Fund acquires Durban refinery land, assets

CAPE TOWN, May 25 (Reuters) - South Africa's state-owned Central Energy Fund has acquired land and assets at the country's largest refinery which ha...

23 May 2024 21:40

Republican-led states ask Supreme Court to quash Big Oil climate lawsuits

May 23 (Reuters) - Nineteen Republican attorneys general have filed a rare complaint directly with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to block several...

22 May 2024 21:54

US lawmakers urge Justice Department to probe climate deception by Big Oil

May 22 (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers behind a congressional probe of major oil companies on Wednesday called on the Justice Department to investigate w...

22 May 2024 02:00

British firms expecting hard time in China market, lobby group warns

BEIJING, May 22 (Reuters) - British firms expect doing business in China to become harder over the next five years, a British business lobby group s...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.