IEA cuts 2012 oil demand outlook

Feb. 10, 2012
Global oil demand in 2012 is expected to grow by 800,000 b/d from 2011, down from last month’s outlook for 1.1 million b/d of demand growth, according to the latest monthly oil market report from the International Energy Agency.

Global oil demand in 2012 is expected to grow by 800,000 b/d from 2011, down from last month’s outlook for 1.1 million b/d of demand growth, according to the latest monthly oil market report from the International Energy Agency.

The report follows this month’s outlook from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which cut its 2012 forecast of worldwide oil demand by 120,000 b/d to 900,000 b/d of growth from 2011.

The Paris-based IEA now expects demand to average 89.9 million b/d this year, as the International Monetary Fund cut its forecast of the economic growth rate that underpins the worldwide oil demand outlook to 3.3% from the 4% outlook that had been assumed since September 2011. The IMF expects a contraction in 2012 economic activity in the Euro zone countries.

IEA still sees robust oil demand growth of 1.2 million b/d in the developing countries outside the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)—although this compares to last month’s outlook for 1.4 million b/d of growth. And the agency expects OECD demand to average 45.25 million b/d this year, down from a 2011 average of 45.64 million b/d, as sliding gasoline demand accounts for more than 40% of this decline.

US demand is forecast to average 18.8 million b/d, down from last year’s 18.89 million b/d, while Canadian demand is seen slipping to 2.21 million b/d from 2.23 million b/d.

Oil demand in China this year is forecast to climb to 9.89 million b/d from last year’s average of 9.51 million b/d, curtailed a bit due to weaker economic growth of 8.2% this year vs. a previous outlook of 9%.

Outside the OECD, IEA says, the industrially important gasoil market will provide 400,000 b/d of the projected gain in oil demand for 2012, as economic growth in these emerging and developing countries averages 5.4%.

OECD oil supply for 2012, forecast to average 19.4 million b/d, is up marginally from IEA’s previous report, with a higher expectation for US production and a small decrease in the outlook for Canadian output. Non-OECD oil production is forecast to average 30 million b/d, up from the 2011 average of 29.8 million b/d. Processing gains and biofuels will add another 4.2 million b/d to this year’s oil supply.

The ‘call on OPEC crude and stock change’ is reduced by 100,000 b/d for both the first half of 2012 and the year as a whole. At 29.9 million b/d, the 2012 ‘call’ is 700,000 b/d below the 2011 average due to a combination of higher non‐OPEC supply and OPEC NGLs, which the agency forecasts will average 6.3 million b/d this year vs. last year’s 5.8 million b/d. IEA estimates that OPEC’s effective spare capacity is 2.82 million b/d, largely unchanged from last month.

IEA said that in addition to supply and demand, the widening of Brent crude oil’s premium to West Texas Intermediate plus midstream and downstream developments are key to explaining oil price dynamics.

There are multiple factors behind the renewed widening in the price differential, recently about $19/bbl, and a shortage of pipeline capacity to move crude to US Gulf Coast refineries from the Midwest is central to the issue.

“An added twist is the deferral of the Keystone XL pipeline project, even though that decision will arguably prompt development of alternative routes to the US Gulf or, longer term, push Canadian crude towards the Pacific Coast. In a global context, strong relative Brent prices would normally confine Atlantic Basin crudes within the region. However, Japanese power sector oil demand, after nuclear capacity shutdowns, is strengthening Asian fuel oil prices, and so too heavier Middle East crude prices. An arbitrage for Brent‐linked African crudes into Asia has therefore opened,” IEA said.

IEA also noted that incremental midstream demand, for example, to fill new strategic storage capacity in China, could pull upwards of 200,000 b/d of extra crude into Asian markets, over and above rising regional products demand and refinery runs.

Also, the apparent paradox of weakening European 2012 oil demand but strengthening refining margins looks less puzzling when recent refinery rationalization is taken into account, IEA said. A spate of actual and threatened closures—from Petroplus plants in Europe through to major export‐oriented units in the Caribbean plus a late‐winter freeze in Europe and Asia—have driven products cracks sharply higher, despite an increasingly gloomy economic picture.