Bernard Looney Expand
China is the world's second-biggest oil consumer and is now snapping up crude after reversing its Covid-19 policies. Photo: Getty Images Expand

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Bernard Looney

Bernard Looney

China is the world's second-biggest oil consumer and is now snapping up crude after reversing its Covid-19 policies. Photo: Getty Images

China is the world's second-biggest oil consumer and is now snapping up crude after reversing its Covid-19 policies. Photo: Getty Images

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Bernard Looney

As Covid-19 lockdowns gripped the world in 2020, Bernard Looney, chief executive officer of BP, made a startling admission: He thought that oil demand might never return to its pre-pandemic peak.

Recently, however, Looney has done an about-face.

After announcing ambitious plans to cut emissions, BP, one of the world’s top crude producers, is now ploughing more money into fossil fuels. Oil consumption is heading for a record this year, according to the International Energy Agency, which advises major economies. Supply, buffeted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a slowdown in US shale growth and lacklustre investment in production, can’t keep up.

It all comes down to China. The world’s second-biggest oil consumer is snapping up crude after reversing its strict Covid-19 policies. Against a backdrop of tight supply, the demand boost has everyone from Goldman Sachs to trading powerhouse Vitol Group predicting a rally to $100 (roughly €94) a barrel later this year.

“The demand from China is very strong,” Amin Nasser, CEO of Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil company, said in a recent interview in Riyadh. By the second half of the year, analysts say, the market will face a shortage.

The impending crunch shows that even as the world embraces cleaner sources of energy, the thirst for oil is hard to slake. While the supply pinch has been a boon for crude producers and their investors, it’s hammering consumers and complicating central banks’ efforts to tame inflation.

“My view, short hand, is maybe people are underestimating demand and overestimating US production,” Saad Rahim, chief economist at trader Trafigura Group, said on the sidelines of the International Energy Week conference in London last week.

In the wake of its abrupt reversal of Zero Covid, the policy requiring mass lockdowns, travel quarantines and testing and tracing, China’s economy is resurgent, boosting oil demand. Manufacturing posted its biggest improvement in more than a decade last month, services activity is climbing and the housing market is stabilising.

The reopening means Chinese oil consumption is poised to hit a record this year. Daily demand will reach an all-time high of 16 million barrels a day after contracting in 2022, according to the median estimate of 11 China-focused consultants surveyed by Bloomberg News earlier this year.

It’s not just China. India and other countries across the Asia-Pacific region are consuming more oil as borders reopen, helping propel global demand to a record 101.9 million barrels a day this year and potentially plunging the market into a deficit by the second half, according to the IEA. Air traffic is recovering, boosting jet-fuel use. And the appetite for crude in the US and Europe has also rebounded.

The revival of international travel with China’s reemergence will be one of the “engines that will drive demand going forward,” Christopher Bake, a member of Vitol’s executive committee, said at the International Energy Week conference. “I think we’ll see that progress over the next few months.”

Supply is no match for the uptick in demand. Though Russia’s oil exports by sea remained resilient last month, market watchers are looking for signs of disruption after the European Union and the majority of Group of Seven nations banned waterborne imports of oil and fuel following the invasion of Ukraine.

Russia’s shipments are under threat as India, a top buyer, faces mounting pressure from bankers to show that its cargoes comply with the $60-a-barrel price cap imposed by the G7.

OPEC, meanwhile, isn’t budging from the production targets it set back in October. Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has said the targets will remain unchanged for the rest of the year.

And the US isn’t coming to the rescue. Output from shale basins is growing at a slower pace as producers run out of prime areas to drill. US production tumbled at the start of the pandemic and is still about 800,000 barrels a day below the record 13.1 million reached in early 2020. This year, growth is likely to be around 560,000 barrels a day, according to research firm Enverus.

China’s reopening will strain global spare production capacity, sending prices to $100 a barrel in the fourth quarter as inventories decline and money supply stabilises, Jeff Currie, Goldman’s head of commodities research, said in a Bloomberg Television interview March 1.

“As China comes back, we’re going to lose that spare capacity,” Currie said. “My confidence that we’ll see another price spike in the next 12-18 months is quite high.”


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