OPEC says oil demand could weaken over next few month

 

OPEC said September 9 global demand for oil could weaken over the remainder of this year as government stimulus packages are wound down, noting that the slowing economic recovery was already hitting growth in oil consumption.

For now, though, the oil producer group expects world oil demand to continue growing at an annual rate of around 1 million b/d both this year and next.

On an annual basis, OPEC has slightly raised its previous forecasts of world oil demand by 10,000 b/d to 85.51 million b/d this year and 85.56 million b/d in 2011.

But it has trimmed its forecasts of demand for its own crude by 90,000 b/d in 2010 and by 80,000 b/d 2011 while increasing its projections of growth in non-OPEC oil supply.

The oil producer group now sees demand for crude from its 12 members averaging 28.65 million b/d this year and at 28.84 million b/d in 2011. The 2010 projection represents a decline of 320,000 b/d from 2009.

OPEC has revised upward its month-ago forecasts of non-OPEC oil supply growth by 140,000 b/d in 2010 and 150,000 b/d in 2011. It now sees non-OPEC oil supply averaging 52.06 million b/d in 2010 and 52.42 million b/d in 2011.

Some 80,000 b/d of the 2010 non-OPEC revision is in OECD production, the result of adjustments in US and UK output forecasts. OPEC now sees total OECD production averaging 19.72 million b/d this year.

 

This article originally published at:  http://peakoil.com