The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Counties, OPEC, says strong oil market monitoring has become expedient to provide accurate data following signs of possible demand surge.
The OPEC said in its monthly oil market report, that the market will need to be closely watched in the coming months to ensure “a sound and sustainable market balance” during an expected surge in demand.
The producers group maintained its bullish forecasts for global oil demand growth this year, predicting an annual increase of as much as 2.7 million barrels a day MMbpd in the third quarter.
In recent days a host of key figures in the market have said that oil consumption appears to be running hotter than expected, prompting warnings of $100 crude this summer.
“The robust oil demand outlook for the summer months warrants careful market monitoring,” OPEC’s Vienna-based secretariat wrote in the report. Participants in its production cuts “will remain vigilant, proactive and prepared to act, when necessary, to the requirement of the market.”
The world’s biggest commodity traders are increasingly confident of a bullish oil market into the second half of the year after prices pierced $90 a bbl for the first time in months.
Vitol Group Chief Executive Officer Russell Hardy said this week that his company now expects growth of 1.9 MMbpd this year, drawing closer to OPEC’s own forecast for an annual increase of 2.2 MMbpd. That would be close to the consumption increase seen in 2023, when demand was still bouncing back from the pandemic.
While OPEC kept most of its demand forecasts unchanged, it did revise non-OPEC+ supply growth this year lower by about 100,000 barrels a day to 1.2 MMbpd effectively boosting the demand for the group’s own crude.
The OPEC and its allies are voluntarily cutting their production by about 2 MMbpd, a policy that will be reviewed at their next meeting on June 1.
by Uche Cecil Izuora