Oil outlooks enter the twilight zone
The feud between the IEA and OPEC highlights how the lines between reality and fantasy over oil demand have become blurred, with huge ramifications for investment
The tragicomic spat between the IEA and OPEC is symptomatic of the ideological mess the energy industry is in. Narratives can be spun to suit any agenda, government policies are often confused, and the oil sector is portrayed as victim, villain and hero. The path to net zero and cheap energy continues to shift due to disparate and unclear energy strategies and forecasting fiction is presented as fact. The IEA suggests oil demand will stop growing by the end of the decade, which elicited a response from OPEC, claiming peak oil is not on the horizon. The IEA predicts not only that global oil demand—including biofuels—will likely level off near 106m b/d, up from just over 102m b/d in 2023, due

Also in this section
21 February 2025
While large-scale planned LNG schemes in sub-Saharan Africa have faced fresh problems, FLNG projects are stepping into that space
20 February 2025
Greater social mobility means increased global demand for refined fuels and petrochemical products, with Asia leading the way in the expansion of refining capacity
19 February 2025
The EU would do well to ease its gas storage requirements to avoid heavy purchase costs this summer, with the targets having created market distortion while giving sellers a significant advantage over buyers
18 February 2025
Deliveries to China decline by around 1m b/d from move to curb crude exports to Shandong port, putting Iran under further economic pressure