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IEA: Global oil demand will rise less quickly as prices increase

IEA: Global oil demand will rise less quickly as prices increase
IEA: Global oil demand will rise less quickly as prices increase

The International Energy Agency warned on Thursday that world oil demand will rise more slowly than anticipated this year. However, it still expects a large surplus in the global market despite the outages which cut supply back in January.

In its monthly report on oil, the agency predicted that global supply will exceed demand by 3,73 million barrels a day in 2026. This is essentially unchanged from last months' forecast. This surplus would be equivalent to almost 4% of global demand, which is higher than any other forecast.

Brent crude LCOc1 - the global benchmark - was trading at less than $70 per barrel on Thursday, after the report. Prices have risen by about 14% in the past year due to tensions between the US and Canada. Prices are still up about 14% since the start of the year due to tensions between Iran and the United States.

The IEA, a consultancy for industrialised countries, said that "escalating geopolitical conflicts, snowstorms in North America and extreme temperatures, as well as Kazakh supply disruptions" prompted the reversal from a "bullish market".

Prices CURB Demand

The IEA said that world oil demand will rise by 850,000 bpd in this year. This is down 80,000 bpd compared to last month's estimate and below the Wednesday projection of OPEC.

According to the IEA, "economic uncertainty and higher oil prices are weighing down on consumption."

OPEC+ – the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, plus Russia and allies – began increasing production in April 2025 following years of cuts. Other producers such as the U.S. Guyana and Brazil have also increased?production.

OPEC+, however, has paused their output increases for the first quarter 2026. On March 1, eight members are expected to meet to decide if they will resume the?hikes for April.

Supply Cuts in Early 2026

The IEA reported that the global oil supply fell by 1.2m bpd to 106.6m bpd after the outages in Kazakhstan.

The agency reduced its forecast for supply growth in 2026 to 2.4m bpd, down from 2.5m bpd as of last month.

The IEA reported that OPEC+ pumped a total of 43.3 million?bpd in January, a decrease of 160,000 bpd compared to December. This is still far higher than the report's estimated demand for OPEC+ oil - plus inventory withdrawals - which was 39.7 mbpd during the first quarter, and 39.6 mbpd during the second.

According to a calculation, the data published by OPEC Wednesday showed a much smaller supply deficit for 2026 if OPEC+ production stays at its January level. Alex Lawler is the reporter. (Editing by David Goodman, Mark Potter and Mark Potter.)

(source: Reuters)