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IEA predicts 'worst year in the history' of oil sector

By AFP - Apr 15,2020 - Last updated at Apr 15,2020

This photo taken on December 03, 2019 shows five platforms over the Johan Sverdrup oil field in the North Sea some 140 kilometres west from the town of Stavanger, Norway (AFP photo)

PARIS — The coronavirus outbreak will slash global oil demand in 2020 to erase a decade of growth and set up "the worst year in the history" of the sector, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Wednesday.

 

      Demand is projected to plummet by a record 9.3 million barrels per day (mbd) for the year as a whole, with 29 mbd in the month of April, and 26 mbd in May -- "staggering numbers", according to the agency's executive director Fatih Birol.

 

      "I believe in a few years' time, when you look at 2020 we may well see that it was the worst year in the history of global oil markets," he told reporters on a teleconference.

 

      "During this terrible year, the second quarter may very well be the worst of the lot and... April may very well be the worst month."

 

      The projected figures for this month were last seen in 1995, said Birol, describing this as "Black April in the history of the oil industry."

 

      The global economy has been hard hit by the coronavirus outbreak, with many industries brought to their knees and air, rail and road traffic slashed as non-essential businesses were closed and hundreds of millions of people around the world placed in lockdown.

 

 

      The IEA said measures taken by the OPEC+ group and other oil producing nations to cut output should allow demand to start exceeding supply again by the second half of 2020, assuming population lockdowns to curb virus spread are lifted.

 

      "Once the declines in oil demand start to reduce and once the impact of the production cuts from the OPEC+ agreement and non-OPEC producers start to bite, we start to see a recovery in the second half of the year," Neil Atkinson, head of the agency's oil division, told the briefing.

 

      "But obviously there's still a long way to go before we reach that point."

 

     

 

       Decade of growth lost

     

 

      In total, producers have undertaken to cut supply by about 12 million barrels a day in May, Atkinson said, including 9.7 million mbd pledged by the OPEC+ group.

 

      G-20 countries have agreed to support the OPEC+ cuts.

 

      The combined effort "takes us right back to below 90 mbd a day which is a level of production for the world which we haven't seen since back in 2011," said Atkinson.

 

      On Tuesday, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said the coronavirus pandemic was pushing the world into its deepest recession in a century, with economic output expected to shrink three per cent.

 

      This means that "COVID-19 results in one year of growth lost of the global economy and almost a decade of growth lost in global oil markets," said Birol.

 

      "The volatility we are seeing in oil markets is detrimental to the global economy at a time that we can least afford it."

 

      Oil prices extended their slump Wednesday, with WTI hitting the lowest level since 2002 as the output cuts were deemed not enough.

 

      The benchmark WTI contract tumbled to $19.20 per barrel, it lowest level in 18 years.

 

      The IEA report said the OPEC+ and G20 actions "won't rebalance the market immediately.

 

      "But 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, whose consequences for the oil market remain very uncertain in the short term."

 

     

 

       'Economic meltdown'

     

 

      Birol said the oil price crash would likely to cause a "huge decline" in global emissions of planet-warming carbon emissions this year.

 

      "But in my view this is not a reason to celebrate because this decline is happening because there is an economic meltdown, the energy industry is in many parts almost collapsing and many people are losing their lives.

 

      "We shouldn't forget that if there is a rebound of the economy... we may well see a big rebound of emissions as well."

 

      In 2009, after the global economic crisis, emissions declined by 0.4 gigatonnes only to rise again by 1.7 gigatonnes the following year -- the highest increase in the last 50 years, said Birol.

 

 

 

 

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