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Plane speaking: IEA says aviation fallout will hold back oil recovery

Plane speaking: IEA says aviation fallout will hold back oil recovery
The coronavirus crisis will leave lasting scars on the airline industry, slowing oil’s revival, according to the IEA. (Reuters)
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Updated 17 June 2020

Plane speaking: IEA says aviation fallout will hold back oil recovery

Plane speaking: IEA says aviation fallout will hold back oil recovery
  • The IEA estimates that demand for jet fuel and kerosene will fall by 62 percent in the second quarter from the same time last year

PARIS: Demand for petrol and diesel is set to heal by the end of the year, but the coronavirus crisis is likely to leave scars on the airline industry and the oil market, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Tuesday.

The IEA continued to upgrade its forecasts for the oil market in its latest monthly report as more countries ease lockdown measures that have pushed the world economy into its greatest crisis since the Great Depression.

It now expects 2020 oil demand to come in at 91.7 million barrels per day (mbd), a drop of 8.1 mbd from last year. That is an improvement on its May estimate an 8.6 mbd reduction and the April estimate of a 9.3 mbd drop.

The IEA noted that year-on-year consumption figures have been rising steadily since “Black April” when the lockdown measures were at their peak. The 21.8 mbd drop in April was pared to an estimated 18.6 mbd reduction in May. The drop is expected to narrow to 12.9 mbd in June and 7.4 mbd in July.

The IEA pointed to a number of encouraging signs of a recovery.

“For demand, increased mobility indicators in the March-May period provided support: in particular, China’s strong exit from lockdown measures has seen demand in April almost back to year-ago levels,” it said.

It also noted a strong rebound in India in May, although demand was still well below last year’s level.

“In the second half of the year the easing of lockdown measures in many countries should provide a boost,” it said.

The IEA released its first forecasts for 2021, when it sees demand rising by 5.7 mbd “as activity begins to return to normal across vast swathes of the economy.”

That will bring global oil demand back up to 97.4 mbd, which it noted will still be 2.4 mbd below the 2019 level, which it said “is largely explained by the dire situation of the aviation sector.”

The IEA estimated that demand for jet fuel and kerosene will fall by 62 percent in the second quarter from the same time last year, and only slowly recover as air travel is likely to be held back by restrictions and lower demand until a vaccine is found.

“Unlike gasoline and diesel, which are likely to recover to close to pre-crisis levels by the end of 2020, the outlook for jet fuel is more uncertain,” it said.