Energy

Exclusive: OPEC sees global oil demand growth slowing in 2023, sources say

World oil demand growth will slow in 2023, OPEC delegates and industry sources said, as surging crude and fuel prices help drive up inflation and act as a drag on the global economy.

Fuel use has rebounded from the 2020 pandemic-induced slump and is set to exceed 2019 levels this year even as prices hit record highs. But high prices have eaten into growth projections for 2022 and fed into expectations for slower growth in 2023.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is expected to publish its first forecast for 2023 demand in July. Its forecast, along with that of the Paris-based International Energy Agency, will be watched closely for pointers on how OPEC supply policy might develop.

An OPEC delegate and another source familiar with OPEC thinking said they expected world demand growth of 2 million barrels per day (bpd) or less in 2023, a rise of just 2%, compared with growth of 3.36 million bpd expected in 2022.

“Even if it is only 1 million bpd, that is still growth and not a peak,” the delegate said of the outlook for next year.

OPEC is expected to publish its first demand forecast for 2023 in its monthly report on July 12, an OPEC source said.

The IEA, which advises Western governments on energy policy, will give its first 2023 demand forecast in a monthly report on Wednesday, an IEA spokesperson said.

OPEC is watching for signs that high fuel prices will lead to oil demand destruction.

Two more OPEC delegates said demand destruction is likely to take a toll on oil use in coming months, although one of them said there was little sign of it yet in the United States, citing recent gasoline demand data.

A senior industry source at a trading firm, not affiliated to the IEA or OPEC, also said he expected lower demand growth in 2023, saying his initial estimates pointed to demand growing by 2 million bpd or less, down from 2.6 million bpd growth in 2022.

“Crude at $120 a barrel is causing demand destruction,” he said. “It is already happening.”

Oil demand forecasters often have to make sizeable revisions given changes in the economic outlook and geopolitical uncertainties, which this year included Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and recent Chinese coronavirus lockdowns.

OPEC originally forecast demand growth in 2022 of 3.28 million bpd, in its first forecast published in July 2021, later raising it up to more than 4 million bpd before cutting it to 3.36 million bpd.

Reporting by Alex Lawler and Dmitry Zhdannikov; Additional reporting by Noah Browning; Editing by Simon Web and Edmund Blair

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

Gulf States suffer the loss of Dh550 billion in energy income due to the regional war

According to Majid Jafar, CEO of Crescent Petroleum Company, the Middle East military dispute is…

46 minutes ago

More than 3,200 new Dubai homebuyers emerge within one year

The project kicked off operations in July 2025 and has already witnessed residential real estate…

20 hours ago

Remraam tenants in Dubai were provided with compensation due to temporary eviction

Residents in the Remraam area of Dubai have received offers of rent reimbursement and resettlement…

2 days ago

PROFX EXPO AFRICA 2026

PROFX MEDIA ANNOUNCES PROFX EXPO AFRICA 2026 IN CAPE  TOWN, UNITING GLOBAL FOREX & FINTECH…

3 days ago

PROFIN EXPO BANGKOK 2026

PROFX MEDIA TO HOST PROFINEXPO BANGKOK 2026, A GLOBAL  GATHERING OF FINTECH, BANKING & INVESTMENT…

3 days ago

Abu Dhabi rent freeze: The implications of this ‘very rare’ policy on you

The Tawtheeq system will not allow registration of contracts at rates higher than those of…

3 days ago