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Opec trims oil demand forecasts for 2021

  • Market: Crude oil
  • 11/02/21

Opec has cut slightly its global oil demand growth forecast for this year as the Covid-19 pandemic continues to dampen economic recovery. It reduced its projections for non-Opec supply.

In its latest Monthly Oil Market Report (MOMR), Opec forecasts global oil demand will grow by 5.8mn b/d this year to 96.05mn b/d. This is around 140,000 b/d below its projection in the previous MOMR.

Extensions and reintroductions of partial lockdowns in a number of countries have led to lower demand projections for the first half of the year, concentrated in the OECD region. Uncertainty has been fuelled by expectations for a weaker recovery in transport fuels in January-June, new Covid-19 variants, and delays to vaccination deployment, Opec said.

"While the global economy is showing signs of a healthy recovery in 2021, oil demand is currently lagging, but is forecast to pick up in the second half of 2021," the report said. Opec expects stimulus programmes in the US and strengthening key Asia-Pacific economies to boost demand in the July-December period.

It sees non-Opec liquids supply at 63.3mn b/d this year, up by 670,000 b/d from 2020 but down by 200,000 b/d from its previous 2021 estimate. It made a similar downward adjustment to US liquids supply for this year, and now sees this rising by 160,000 b/d from 2020 to average 17.8mn b/d.

Consequently, Opec has revised higher the call on its members' own crude by 340,000 b/d from its previous projections, to 27.5mn b/d this year. This is up by around 5mn b/d from 2020 levels. Opec crude production averaged 25.5mn b/d in January, up by 181,000 b/d from December, according to an average of secondary sources including Argus.

Citing preliminary data, Opec said OECD commercial oil stocks fell by 39.3mn bl in December from November to 3.07bn bl. This is up by 179mn bl from a year earlier and 143mn bl above the 2015-19 five-year average. Last month, the Opec+ group recommended keeping the 2015-19 period as the basis for the latest five-year average of OECD commercial oil stock levels, saying 2020 as an "exceptional year" would distort the figures.


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