The global oil surplus
will persist at least until late 2016 as demand growth slows and OPEC
shows “renewed determination” to maximize output, according to the
International Energy Agency.
The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, by effectively dropping production limits at its
Dec. 4 meeting, is displaying hardened resolve to maintain sales volumes
even as prices fall in an oversupplied market
,
the agency said Friday in its monthly report. While its policy is
hitting rivals, triggering the steepest drop in non-OPEC supply since
1992, world oil inventories will likely swell further once Iran restores
exports on the completion of a deal to lift sanctions, it said.
Oil slumped to a six-year low below $40 a barrel in London after
OPEC, which controls about 40 percent of world supply, said it would
keep pumping in excess of its old production limit. Saudi Arabia, the
group’s most powerful member, has steered its strategy to pressure
rivals in the U.S. with lower prices.
“As inventories continue to swell into 2016, there will still be a lot of oil weighing on the market
,”
said the Paris-based agency, which advises 29 nations on energy policy.
OPEC’s decision last week “appears to signal a renewed determination to
maximize low-cost OPEC supply and drive out high-cost non-OPEC
production -- regardless of price.”
Swelling Inventories
Abandoning
output targets doesn’t mean OPEC is about to further open the taps, as
its biggest members -- Saudi Arabia and Iraq -- are already pumping near
record levels, the agency said. The group probably won’t bolster output
until Iran completes an agreement on its nuclear program that would
lift sanctions on crude exports, the IEA predicted. Iran’s return will
probably help to swell oil inventories by an “impressive” 300 million
barrels, the agency said.
The accumulation of the surplus will
actually slow next year to about half the pace observed in 2015 as
non-OPEC supply wilts and demand remains strong enough to absorb some of
the excess. The combination of rising consumption and an expansion in
storage facilities means the world won’t run out of space to store the
surplus crude, the agency said.
“There is evidence the Saudi-led
strategy is starting to work,” the agency said. “Oil below $50 is
clearly driving out non-OPEC supply.” Production from outside OPEC will
contract by 600,000 barrels a day next year, compared with a surge of
2.4 million a day in 2014. U.S. crude production will decline by 415,000
barrels a day to 12.4 million a day, the IEA predicted.
Strategy Working
“Non-OPEC
growth year-on-year is grinding to a halt, so some of the effects from
low oil prices are starting to appear,” said Amrita Sen, chief oil
analyst at consultants Energy Aspects Ltd. in London. “But demand growth
is also slowing as expected.”
Global oil demand growth will slow
to 1.2 million barrels a day in 2016, down from a five-year peak of 1.8
million reached this year, as the boost from cheap fuel prices wears
off, the agency said. The agency’s 2016 estimates of demand and supply
are unchanged from last month’s report.
Production from OPEC’s 12
members rose by 50,000 barrels a day to 31.73 million a day in November,
the highest in two months, the agency said. That’s about 400,000 a day
more than the average required from the group next year.
“The
latest OPEC meeting, which concluded by essentially saying that it’s
every producer for himself, actually presents a silver lining for the
oil market
,”
said Harry Tchilinguirian, head of commodity markets strategy at BNP
Paribas SA. “The idling of rigs drilling for oil in the U.S. will
accelerate and the number of uncompleted wells will increase. So we
believe the pick-up in price will come in late 2016.”
Source: Bloombeg
No comments:
Post a Comment