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IEA sees long oil demand plateau after peak

  • Market: Crude oil
  • 24/10/23

Global oil demand peaks towards the end of this decade at around 102mn b/d then remains broadly at that level for the following two decades, according to the IEA's baseline scenario in its latest World Energy Outlook (WEO).

The IEA's Stated Policies Scenario (STEPS), which is based on prevailing policies worldwide, sees global demand — excluding biofuels — rising from 96.5mn b/d in 2022 to 101.5mn b/d in 2030. This is 900,000 b/d below last year's scenario for 2030. From then on oil consumption begins a long but slow decline, falling by just over 4mn b/d to 97.4mn b/d in 2050.

The IEA puts the downward revision from last year's WEO mainly down to the "astounding rise in electric vehicle sales" which is now affecting oil demand for road transport. While demand for use in petrochemicals, aviation and shipping continues to grow up to 2050, this is not enough to offset falls in demand for road transport, along with the power and buildings sectors, the IEA said.

The IEA's baseline scenario is in stark contrast to that of Opec, which earlier this month massively raised its global oil demand projection up to 2045.

The WEO explores two other scenarios — the Announced Pledges Scenario (APS) assumes government targets on emissions are met in full and on time, and the Net Zero Emissions by 2050 Scenario (NZE) lays a path to limit global warming to 1.5°C.

In APS, oil demand falls to 92.5mn b/d by 2030 and 54.8mn b/d by 2050, led by sharper declines in oil demand for road transport with "EVs accounting for more than 75pc of passenger car and truck sales in 2050." In NZE, oil demand falls to 77.5mn b/d by 2030 and 24.3mn b/d in 2050.

On the supply side, the STEPS scenario sees US tight oil output increasing by 2mn b/d between 2022 and 2030, to around 9.5mn b/d. Output peaks soon after and falls to around 8.5mn b/d by 2050. Other major additions come from Brazil and Guyana, with the latter boosting output to 2mn b/d by the mid 2030s. Opec production rises by just 1mn b/d by 2030, as African members' contributions fall by 1.5mn b/d. Opec's share of global oil production rises from 36pc in 2022 to 42pc in 2050.

Russian production falls by around 3.5mn b/d between 2022 and 2050 "as it struggles to maintain output from existing fields or to develop large new ones."

Tense Middle East

The IEA said some of the immediate pressures from the global energy crisis had eased, but it called attention to "unsettled" energy markets, geopolitics and the global economy.

"A tense situation in the Middle East is a reminder of hazards in oil markets a year after Russia cut gas supplies to Europe," the IEA said. "This underscores once again the frailties of the fossil fuel age."

The agency said oil and gas investment now is almost double the level required under the NZE scenario. It expects this to come in at around $800bn in 2023, broadly in line with the level needed in STEPS to 2030, that "industry today does not see a significant near-term reduction in demand as likely."

STEPS sees energy-related CO2 emissions peaking in the mid-2020s but emissions remain high enough to increase global average temperatures to around 2.4C in 2100.

"Bending the emissions curve onto a path consistent with 1.5C remains possible but very difficult," the IEA said.


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27/05/25

Is US crude slipping into a Trump slump?

Is US crude slipping into a Trump slump?

New York, 27 May (Argus) — The end of the shale boom has been called before, but it may finally be about to become a reality in light of this year's oil price slump, which has reignited talk of peak shale oil output. Such a development would have wide-ranging repercussions for global oil market balances, since the shale revolution not only sent the US to the top spot among the world's biggest producers and secured US energy independence, but its short-cycle flexibility has frequently tested the resolve of the Opec+ group. The sector was already maturing rapidly even before this year's price rout, with investor returns long favoured over growth. But the fallout from President Donald Trump's trade wars that have increased the risk of a recession, and from Opec's decision to ramp up output faster, has accelerated shale's slowdown. The largest pure-play producer in the prolific Permian basin, Diamondback Energy, sounded the alarm earlier this month with a stark warning that US crude output is at a "tipping point" at current prices, with onshore production having likely peaked already and expected to start declining this quarter. The company argues that geological constraints are now offsetting gains from operational efficiencies and technology improvements. For now, most of the listed independents that have announced plans to cut spending and drop rigs as a result of recent market volatility have been able to keep their production guidance for the year largely the same — but that might change if prices sink further. Still, the prospect of peak shale does not necessarily mean output is likely to fall off a cliff anytime soon. And key to the outlook will be the future trajectory of oil prices. A potential decline back into the mid-$50/bl range on a sustained basis would likely trigger steep output declines as soon as next year. But some further growth cannot be ruled out if prices push higher. Recent consolidation has concentrated ownership of the shale patch in the hands of the largest listed operators, which are better equipped to handle a downturn than smaller rivals. And US majors, which are powering ahead in the Permian, will be able to deploy their scale and bargaining power to their advantage. ExxonMobil plans to significantly ramp up output from the region by the end of the decade, buoyed by its $60bn takeover of Permian giant Pioneer Natural Resources. But the US majors' push for efficiencies of scale reflects their much longer-term view of shale, seeking to maximise value, not volume. Opec's willingness to maintain its new production policy is likely to be critical to shale's wider production outlook. A Saudi budget breakeven price estimated at up to $90/bl has been key to assumptions that US shale will remain a collateral beneficiary of Opec+ production restraint. But the uncertain oil demand outlook means a push for market share might suddenly hold more appeal for Riyadh. "One reason for Saudi to bring barrels back now is that much of the incremental crude supply that will come into the market over the next five years is offshore, as opposed to the more price-sensitive US shale," Bank of America says. Trump's "energy dominance" goals are unlikely to be realised when it comes to US oil production, given his preference for lower oil prices and the industry headwinds he has contributed to. The president who campaigned on a platform of "drill, baby, drill" could see US shale output decline during his term. Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Full steam ahead in Canada’s oil sands


27/05/25
News
27/05/25

Full steam ahead in Canada’s oil sands

Calgary, 27 May (Argus) — Lower crude prices are weighing on US shale producers' ability to maintain profitable production, but Canadian oil sands companies are shrugging off the price drops and forging ahead with growth plans. Prices have hovered around $60/bl since early April, but this is much less of a concern for oil sands executives after they were forced over decades to drive down their costs to weather deeply discounted local crude prices brought on by insufficient pipeline egress. Higher prices are always welcome, but the low-cost, long-life, low-decline business model that is a hallmark of producers in northeast Alberta could woo investors at a time when other basins are stumbling. For Canada's two largest oil producers, Cenovus and Canadian Natural Resources (CNRL), growth capital and dividends are still intact with WTI prices at $45/bl or lower, while fellow oil sands-focused firms Suncor and Imperial Oil can maintain production and dividends at $35/bl, the companies said in recent earnings calls. The four companies produced a combined 3.1mn b/d of liquids in the first quarter, with most of this from the oil sands — the world's third-largest deposit, at 166bn bl of proven reserves, according to federal agency Natural Resources Canada. The quartet made a combined C$6.3bn ($4.4bn) profit in the first quarter, as a narrowing Western Canadian Select discount helped to offset falling WTI prices . Oil sands operators hardly flinched when benchmark prices slid to near $57/bl on 5 May, while peers in the US' Permian and Bakken plays started to cut activity and idle rigs. "If you've been in this business long enough, you've seen this movie, it's not new," Suncor chief executive Rich Kruger said on 7 May. "It all starts with a rock-solid balance sheet, a low and very, very competitive WTI breakeven." Smaller oil sands players may not boast the same synergies as their larger neighbours, but they too are resilient, including Athabasca Oil, which says it can still fund its growth plans with WTI at $48/bl. An expansion of pure-play producer MEG Energy's Christina Lake project is also not at risk despite the sliding prices, so long as WTI remains at $53/bl or higher. "You don't roll out projects without stress-testing them under various price environments," MEG chief executive Darlene Gates said of the firm's plans to grow production at Christina Lake — which uses steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) — by 23pc to 135,000 b/d. MEG me an offer But falling oil prices are weighing on MEG's share price, potentially leaving it vulnerable to being taken over by another oil sands player. Calgary-based Strathcona Resources wants to double-down on its oil sands exposure by making a near C$6bn pitch for MEG, it said on 16 May. Majority owned by private equity firm Waterous Energy Fund (WEF), Strathcona is no stranger to consolidation, and has signed nearly C$3bn worth of deals to divest its liquids-rich Montney assets in preparation for the hostile takeover. "These are doppelgangers... identical twins," WEF chief executive Adam Waterous says, as rationale for the potential tie-up. The two companies combined would create Canada's fifth-largest oil producer, with oil reserves comparable to US independents Occidental, Diamondback and EOG. Analysts say Strathcona's bid for MEG will likely not be the last. "We anticipate stiff competition for MEG," brokerage firm Desjardins Securities oil and gas research director Chris MacCulloch says, indicating that any of the other five partners in the Pathways Alliance consortium — CNRL, Cenovus, Suncor, Imperial Oil and ConocoPhillips — could take a run at the smaller firm. Christina Lake is closest to SAGD assets operated by Cenovus and CNRL, while MEG's proposed but currently shelved 120,000 b/d Surmont asset is adjacent to ConocoPhillips' Surmont project. By Brett Holmes Leading oil sands producers' liquids output '000 b/d 1Q2025 1Q2024 ±% CNRL 1,174 976 20 Suncor 791 785 1 Cenovus 671 658 2 Imperial Oil 418 421 -1 Strathcona Resources 136 131 4 MEG 103 104 -1 Total 3,293 3,075 7 — Company earnings reports Leading oil sands producers' profits C$mn 1Q2025 1Q2024 ±% CNRL 2,458 987 149 Suncor 1,689 1,610 5 Cenovus 859 1,176 -27 Imperial Oil 1,288 1,195 8 Strathcona Resources 205 101 104 MEG 211 98 115 Total 6,710 5,167 30 — Company earnings reports Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

UAE says oil demand could surprise to upside


27/05/25
News
27/05/25

UAE says oil demand could surprise to upside

Abu Dhabi, 27 May (Argus) — Oil demand could surprise to the upside, UAE energy minister Suhail-al Mazrouei said today. Speaking at the World Utilities Congress in Abu Dhabi, al-Mazrouei said he felt oil demand "is picking up" and could "surprise us" if investment in hydrocarbons do not pick up. His comments come a few days before the UAE and seven other Opec+ producers meet to decide on production policy for July. As a collective, the 18 Opec+ producers have implemented three rounds of production cuts that, on paper, took more than 5.5mn b/d of production offline since October 2022. Eight of those producers, including the UAE, have been steadily returning some output since April. The increments returned this month, and to be returned in June, are larger than originally planned, at 411,000 b/d. The group attributed the larger-than-expected increases, at least in part, to stronger oil demand over the coming summer months. The group of eight will meet to determine whether to return 137,000 b/d as planned, or opt for another 411,000 b/d. Mazrouei today would not be drawn on what the group might do. "This [Opec+] group… is doing its best to balance the market, and ensure that we have enough investments in supply," he said. "If this group was not there, there would be chaos. If it was not making sacrifices, especially the group of eight… we would not have balance; you would be seeing shocks. "So rest assured, this group is doing its best," he said. The meeting is scheduled for 1 June, although Opec+ delegate sources say it will very likely brought forward to 31 May, just as happened last time . By Nader Itayim, Bachar Halabi and Rithika Krishna Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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US shale producers grapple with tariff fallout, Opec


27/05/25
News
27/05/25

US shale producers grapple with tariff fallout, Opec

New York, 27 May (Argus) — US oil executives remain on the defensive following forecasts for a sharp shale production growth slowdown this year, despite President Donald Trump's 90-day trade truce with China helping oil prices bounce back from four-year lows. The US oil sector is having to contend with surging Opec+ supplies at a time when worldwide demand is flagging, as well as steel tariffs that have raised the cost of oil field equipment. Some companies are already starting to cut spending and drop rigs after warning that the sector is near or already at peak output. And with oil prices still hovering around levels needed to profitably drill new wells, any renewed weakness could accelerate the downturn. Hundreds of producers and suppliers gathered at the Super DUG Conference & Expo in Fort Worth, Texas, earlier this month to discuss how best to navigate the growing challenges facing the industry. Many of them said they were bracing for further headwinds, but they also argued the industry is in better shape to withstand the latest slump after spending the years since the Covid-19 pandemic getting its finances in order. Some attendees expressed frustration that tariffs remain a moving target and are hard to plan for as a result, but services firms noted some upside from a rush of bookings from customers looking to avoid getting hit. Others believe the industry may be able to come together and figure out how to mitigate the effects of tariffs, but consider Opec+ a bigger concern as additional barrels hitting the market from the producer group have the potential to sink prices. Trump has ruffled feathers with his unwavering push for lower oil prices to help tackle inflation, but executives are giving him the benefit of the doubt, given his promise to roll back costly environmental regulations and free up permitting bottlenecks — both of which could bolster the industry in the long term. But oil field services companies are bearing the brunt of this year's slowdown, with the share price of Liberty Energy — founded by US energy secretary Chris Wright — down by about 45pc since January. The company's calendar is "full" and activity looks to be "quite solid" through to the end of the second quarter, Liberty chief executive Ron Gusek told the conference. "My expectation is we are going to see a reduction in activity over the back half of the year, barring some meaningful change in the macro," he said. Drilling down An uncertain outlook for oil prices could spur a reduction in drilling programmes as companies look to shore up balance sheets and protect free cash flow. "I don't know how steep that will be... I think it's going to be tens of rigs. Maybe it's in the 30-40 range," Gusek said, referring to the number of drilling rigs that are likely be shut down by US onshore producers. For Liberty, that could translate into a decline of 10-15 hydraulic fracturing crews. "I don't view that as catastrophic by any stretch of the imagination, but I do think we're going to see a wind down," Gusek said. "Certainly, by the time we get out into the fourth quarter, where capital programmes are normally winding down for the year, I think we're going to see a real taper-off there." It is too early to say what 2026 has in store for the industry but "we'll have to be ready for that", Gusek said Meanwhile, upstream independent Continental Resources founder and chairman Harold Hamm — who helped kick-start the shale boom by combining horizontal drilling with fracking in North Dakota's Bakken basin to tap previously hard-to-access reserves — warned that the current bout of oil price weakness could continue as oversupply is likely to remain for some time yet. "Should people expect lower for longer at this point, with prices where they're at? Probably," Hamm said. Hamm still sees potential for US crude output to increase by a further 1.5mn-2mn b/d before levelling off — even though the talk in industry circles is that shale is reaching a peak . Continental has recently expanded overseas and is looking at developing resources in Turkey, but the bulk of the company's spending will remain in the Lower 48 US onshore, Hamm said. The Bakken has been written off many times in the past, but the play keeps coming back. "It just doesn't go away," Hamm said. "We still find out every day new stuff that works really well." A major campaigner for Trump, Hamm said he plans to source as much of the oil field equipment needed for his company from domestic suppliers in future, after being shocked to discover how much comes from overseas. "We're going to buy as much as we can right here in the US. We think it's the right thing to do." Peak or plateau? Leading operators from Diamondback Energy to Occidental Petroleum have recently talked about US crude output peaking sooner than previously expected, with shale remaining under pressure as prices hover below the $65/bl average breakeven price flagged by executives in a recent Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas shale industry survey as necessary to profitably drill a new well. Diamondback, the largest pure-play producer in the Permian, warned in a recent widely circulated letter to shareholders that US output is at a "tipping point", with geological headwinds starting to outweigh the benefits from improvements in technology and operational efficiencies. "I would maybe caveat it just a little bit different and not call it a peak, necessarily, but I think we're in for a period of a plateau," Continental chief executive Doug Lawler told the conference. But he agreed that the industry's ability to offset the impact of lower oil prices is limited. "There's nothing that we can use in the industry to absorb a $10/bl drop in price from a technology standpoint," Lawler said. "There are no capital efficiencies that can be captured that make up $10/bl." Still, recent market volatility might not be enough to deter investors that have gradually returned to the sector as returns have improved. The fear of missing out has brought back a growing number of investor groups — from pension funds to endowments — and that is unlikely to change for as long as returns are forthcoming — with the exception of funds modelled along environmental, social and governance investing. "Most of our investors don't worry about short-term volatility," Pearl Energy Investments founder and managing partner Billy Quinn said. "They rely on us to make good investment decisions through volatile cycles." The industry is on a much firmer footing these days, having learned the hard way about the pitfalls of spending beyond its means, which resulted in multiple bankruptcies in previous downturns. Gone are the days when shale reinvestment rates exceeded 100pc as producers sought to boost output at any cost. Shareholder distributions are now the priority. "It's just a much healthier industry than it once was," Houston-based EIV Resources' partner and chief executive, Claire Harvey, said. Others spoke about how a sector that has suffered the ups and downs of past downturns has learned over time to prepare for the leaner times. This has meant targeting top-quality acreage, ditching assets with high breakeven prices and using the latest technology to maximise returns. "Necessity is the mother of invention," Denver-based independent SM Energy chief executive Herb Vogel said. SM Energy operates in west Texas' Midland basin, south Texas' Maverick basin and the Uinta basin of northeast Utah. "Low price cycles make us stronger," Vogel said. By Stephen Cunningham US tight oil production US production growth outlook US onshore oil rigs Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Australia recommits to easing oil, gas development


27/05/25
News
27/05/25

Australia recommits to easing oil, gas development

Brisbane, 27 May (Argus) — Australia's federal resources minister has promised to revisit laws designed to ease the process of developing offshore oil and gas projects, after planned changes stalled in parliament last year. The government is planning reforms to clarify which groups must be consulted under federal laws before winning approvals from the regulator, the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental Management Authority (Nopsema), minister Madeleine King said on 27 May. Speaking at the Australian Energy Producers conference in Brisbane, King said her centre-left Labor government, re-elected earlier this month, wanted a workable set of rules for offshore developments. "An improved approvals process is a key focus for this government," King said on 27 May. "We must effectively balance environmental and social impacts with the best interests of households, businesses and the wider energy industry." King in 2024 promised changes to simplify consultation requirements . This cameafter Aboriginal traditional owners of land and sea country brought court cases that halted projects operated by Australian independents Santos and Woodside Energy, but were later withdrawn because of opposition from independent and Green senators . The cases affecting the upstream producers were resolved following a two-month hiatus in the case of Woodside's Scarborough LNG project, while Santos' $4.6bn Barossa scheme in the offshore Timor Sea was delayed by a lengthy legal battle. Nopsema has since updated guidelines for firms conducting offshore activities in line with the Federal Court's 2022 ruling on consultation. The regulator also holds jurisdiction over offshore wind as well as carbon capture and storage facilities that Australia is likely to require, in order to meet its greenhouse gas reduction targets and replace coal-fired power with renewables. This is in line with Canberra's goal for 82pc of power to come from clean sources by 2030. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at [email protected] Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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