The International Energy Agency (IEA) on April 15 forecast a 29 million barrel per day (MMbbl/d) dive in April oil demand to levels not seen in 25 years and warned no output cut by producers could fully offset the near-term falls facing the market.
Benchmark Brent crude futures fell following the IEA’s monthly report, trading down more than 4% or $1.30 to $28.30 per barrel at 10:27 GMT.
OPEC Cuts Oil Demand Forecast Again Due to ‘Historic Shock’
The IEA forecast a 9.3 MMbbl/d drop in demand for 2020 despite what it called a “solid start” by producers following a record deal to curb supply in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
“By lowering the peak of the supply overhang and flattening the curve of the build-up in stocks, they help a complex system absorb the worst of this crisis,” the Paris-based IEA said in its monthly report.
“There is no feasible agreement that could cut supply by enough to offset such near-term demand losses. However, the past week’s achievements are a solid start.”
OPEC and other producers, including Russia, on April 12 agreed a record cut in output from May of 9.7 MMbbl/d, or almost 10% of global supply, to help support prices and curb oversupply.
Ahead of that, however, April could prove the worst month ever for the industry as production is set to increase while demand tumbles amid economic lockdowns around the world, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said.
“When we look back on 2020 we may well see that it was the worst year ... April may well have been the worst month. It may go down as Black April,” Birol told reporters on a call.
Oil producers “lost two very important months,” Birol added, referring to events including the failure of producers in early March to agree on cutting output. Instead, Saudi Arabia, Russia and others pledged to increase production as they looked to grab back market share.
Now, in addition to planned supply cuts, some nations are expected to boost buying for strategic reserves.
The IEA said it was “still waiting for more details on some planned production cuts and proposals to use strategic storage,” noting the United States, India, China and South Korea have either offered or are considering such purchases.
“If the transfers into strategic stocks, which might be as much as 200 million barrels, were to take place in the next three months or so, they could represent about 2 MMbbl/d of supply withdrawn from the market,” the IEA said.
Birol said the IEA’s forecasts on such purchases were based on “our communications with the countries, what we see in the press and the countries' public announcements.”
Recommended Reading
US Oil & Gas Rigs Fall in May By Most in a Month Since 2020
2023-05-26 - The U.S. oil and gas rig count fell by 44 this month, in the biggest drop in three years.
Top 20 Private Oil, Gas Operators
2023-05-26 - Enverus lists the top 20 private oil and gas operators for Hart Energy.
Venezuela, Trinidad to Set June Meeting to Discuss Dragon Gas Project
2023-05-26 - Officials from both governments last met in March in Venezuela, where they signed confidentiality agreements required to set up a negotiation framework, following the issuance in January of a two-year U.S. license green-lighting talks for the project.
SUPER DUG: VTX Energy Comes Full Circle in Delaware Basin [WATCH]
2023-05-25 - CEO of VTX Energy Partners Gene Shepherd sat down with Hart Energy's Jordan Blum to discuss his company's full circle moment back to the Delaware Basin.
Top 20 Private E&Ps in the Permian, Rockies
2023-05-25 - Enverus lists the top 20 private E&Ps in the Permian and Rockies for Hart Energy.