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Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews. 

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Rystad Energy: COVID To Accelerate Peak Oil Demand To 2028

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Global oil demand will peak at 102 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2028, Rystad Energy said on Monday, noting that the push to low-carbon energy and the coronavirus pandemic will speed up the peak oil demand timeline to 2028 from 2030 previously expected.

Before the pandemic upended forecasts for oil demand for both the short and long term, Rystad Energy had expected the maximum world oil demand to hit 106 million bpd in 2030.

According to the energy research and business intelligence company, it will not be until 2023 that global oil demand recovers to the pre-pandemic levels. In 2023, oil demand is seen at 100.1 million bpd, surpassing the 99.6 million bpd demand in 2019.

This year, global oil demand will slump to 89.3 million bpd. The recovery will be slow next year amid regional lockdowns and a sluggish recovery in the aviation industry, Rystad Energy said.

“Overall, we do not believe Covid-19 has put peak oil demand behind us, but we do acknowledge the pandemic will greatly alter the peak oil demand reckoning moment, both in terms of timing and volumes,” Artyom Tchen, Senior Oil Markets Analyst at Rystad Energy, said in a statement.

In 2050, oil demand is expected to significantly decline to 62 million bpd due to the expected high market share of electric vehicles (EVs), Rystad said. 

Analysts and oil majors have recently said that the pandemic and the possible lasting shift of consumer behavior may have already brought peak oil demand. Related: Can Ecuador Save Its Ailing Oil Sector?

Globally, we may have passed peak oil demand last year, as fuel consumption may never recover from the pandemic-inflicted decline, BP said in its annual outlook in September.

OPEC, for its part, is way more conservative in its latest estimates, although it also revised down its projections last month and said that even after oil demand peaks, it would not fall off a cliff afterward. OPEC expects global oil demand will exceed the pre-pandemic levels in 2022 and grow steadily until the late 2030s when it will begin to plateau.

Saudi Arabia and its oil giant Aramco continue to say that peak oil demand is still nowhere in sight and that the world will need oil and gas for the foreseeable future, regardless of estimates by analysts and even OPEC that global oil demand will start to plateau and decline at some point in the late 2030s.

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By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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Leave a comment
  • Mamdouh Salameh on November 02 2020 said:
    Rystad Energy is sinking deeper in its self-delusions. Every now and then it comes up with a flashy attention-seeking projection that has no basis in reality or serious research. Just remember when it came up with the ridiculous projection that by 2025 US oil production would be bigger that the combined production of both Russia and Saudi Arabia.

    Now it is pontificating on how COVID-19 pandemic will accelerate peak oil demand to 2028. It should instead endeavour to study the realities that will govern the global oil market during the 21st century and far beyond.

    The first is that there will neither be a post-oil era nor a peak oil demand well into the future. The second reality is that the notions of an imminent global energy transition from oil and gas to renewables and zero emissions are illusions. The third reality is that oil and gas will continue to be the core business of the global oil industry and the fourth reality is that the global economy will continue to run on oil and gas throughout the 21st century and far beyond.

    Rustand Energy should refrain from coming up with such flamboyant projections because they make it look ridiculous in the eyes of its readers and energy specialists alike.

    Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
    International Oil Economist
    Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London

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