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Business / Qatar Business

Opec trims demand forecast for its oil

Published: 11 Oct 2013 - 06:56 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 11:09 pm

LONDON: Opec further lowered the forecast demand for its crude in the fourth quarter and 2014, and said its production remained higher than next year’s global requirement despite a plunge in Iraqi and Libyan output.

The outlook could point to a challenging 2014 for the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. Rising rival output will make it harder for it to keep its own production at high rates without risking a drop in prices below its preferred level of $100 a barrel.

In a monthly report issued yesterday, Opec forecast demand for its oil in 2014 will average 29.56 million barrels per day (b/d), down 50,000 b/d from its previous estimate. 

Opec also sees lower demand for its crude in the fourth quarter — when demand usually reaches an annual peak due to the Northern Hemisphere winter — and painted a bearish picture on the prospects for refined fuels.

“Despite the more positive outlook for the US and Europe, global product markets are expected to come under pressure over the winter season,” the report, from Opec economists, said.

“The combination of sluggish demand and increasing product supplies are likely to dampen margins, leading to lower refinery runs over this period.” Demand for Opec crude in the fourth quarter of 2013 is expected to average 30.49m b/d, 230,000 b/d less than previously forecast.

According to secondary sources cited in the report, Opec pumped 30.05m b/d in September despite a drop in Iraqi and Libyan supply, leaving output 490,000 b/d more than next year’s demand forecast. 

Top exporter Saudi Arabia kept its output above 10m b/d for a second month, according to the report, helping to cover shortfalls caused by strikes and protests in Libya and construction work at Iraq’s main export terminal.

Opec, which pumps more than a third of the world’s oil,  meets on December 4 in Vienna to decide whether to adjust its output target of 30m b/d. 

Opec Secretary General Abdullah Al Badri said he was comfortable with the 2014 market outlook and the forecast demand drop for Opec oil was not large, a sign the group may not make big policy changes in December.

In ysterday’s report, Opec left estimated growth in world demand next year at 1.04m b/d, while leaving the non-Opec supply forecast almost unchanged at 1.21m b/d. Reuters