By Melissa Cantor, Editor at LinkedIn News
The International Energy Agency predicts that global demand for oil will dwindle after 2030, with growth in the sector slowing “almost to a halt in the coming years.” That forecast may seem dubious today, with pent-up pandemic demand and supply disruptions linked to the war in Ukraine driving record profits for Big Oil. But as the transition to electric vehicles, clean energy and other technologies picks up pace — especially in large, populous countries such as China — annual demand growth for oil will fall from 2.4 million daily barrels this year to 400,000 in 2028, the IEA says.
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NEW 🚨 The OIL 2023 is out and looks at how oil markets are set to evolve over the next 5 years. There are few things striking for me and just sharing 5️⃣ takeaways
1️⃣ Energy transition 🚙 kicking in for oil consumption prospects, but we are still dealing with deceleration of GROWTH signalling that we have in front of us record high demand every year
2️⃣ China 🇨🇳 is as always the wild card of the system. How its consumption will evolve is set to have major impact. But developments in india 🇮🇳 too will matter a lot
3️⃣ On supply side 🩸the world seems splitting responsibilities. More production growth coming from non-OPEC countries, including US, Brazil and Guyana, while OPEC ones will cover the expansion of spare capacity (then things will likely be not so net…)
4️⃣ Investment 💰- difficult to make a one to one comparison, but a striking evidence is that the world today produce much more oil than what produced about a decade ago with upstream investment being significantly lower. Three oil price crashes in less than 10 years made the industry to learn the lesson…
5️⃣ Production growth is one side of the world (Atlantic) 🚢 and refinery capacity moves to East of Suez. Trade of oil (and products) get more and more interesting….
Much more on IEA website‼️
#oilgas #energy #data #future #investment #China #India #oilandgas #oott