Saudi, Russian oil cuts to cause ‘significant’ supply shortfall by year-end: IEA
The extension of supply cuts by Saudi Arabia and Russia to the end of 2023 will lock in a substantial market deficit through the fourth quarter, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Wednesday, as it stuck by its estimates for demand growth this year and next.
OPEC and its allies, known as OPEC+, began limiting supplies in 2022 to bolster the market. This month, oil benchmark Brent breached $90 a barrel for the first time this year after Saudi Arabia and Russia extended their combined 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) cuts until the end of 2023.
Output curbs by OPEC+ members of more than 2.5 million bpd since the start of 2023 have so far been offset by higher supplies from producers outside the alliance, including the United States, Brazil, and still under-sanctions Iran, the agency said.
“But from September onwards, the loss of OPEC+ production, will drive a significant supply shortfall through the fourth quarter,” it said in its monthly oil report.
However, the lack of cuts at the start of next year would shift the balance to a surplus, the agency said, highlighting that stocks will be at uncomfortably low levels, increasing the risk of another surge in volatility in a fragile economic environment.
Chaotic forecasting
Broader economic concerns, led by China’s sluggish post-pandemic recovery, have been amplified by worries that interest rates will remain high in the United States.
Still, oil demand at the world’s biggest oil importer has so “far remained remarkably unaffected by its economic downturn,” the IEA said.
“China is the main wild card,” it added. “Any abrupt weakening of China’s industrial activity and oil demand is likely to spill over globally, making for a more challenging climate for emerging markets in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.”
Estimates of global demand and supply this year and next differ markedly depending on the forecaster.
Both the IEA and OPEC — in its monthly report published on Tuesday — are optimistic about Chinese demand over the course of 2023, leaving their global demand estimates for this year and next largely unchanged.
Meanwhile, the US government’s Energy Information Administration on Tuesday was generally less upbeat on demand and more buoyant on supply for 2024, and forecast a considerable downward revision in consumption and a slight hike in non-OPEC supply.
“Welcome to the chaotic world of forecasting,” Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM said.