Global Oil Demand Slumps Amid Tariff Tensions, Says IEA
According to the IEA, global oil demand is expected to grow by only 700,000 barrels per day in 2025, due to sluggish consumption in emerging countries affected by trade tensions. ©AFP

Growth in oil demand is anemic globally, with several countries in the crosshairs of US President Donald Trump's tariff threats suffering drops, the IEA said Friday.

Annual growth in oil demand fell from 1.1 million barrels per day (mbd) in the first quarter of the year to just 0.5 mbd in the second, the International Energy Agency said in its monthly oil market review.

Consumption in emerging markets was "particularly lackluster," it added.

It lowered its forecast for oil-demand growth for 2025 as a whole to 0.7 mbd, "its lowest rate since 2009," apart from when the Covid pandemic shut large swathes of the global economy in 2020.

"Although it may be premature to attribute this slower growth to the detrimental impact of tariffs manifesting themselves in the real economy, the largest quarterly contractions occurred in countries that found themselves in the crosshairs of the tariff turmoil," the IEA said.

The drops were particularly sharp in China, Japan, South Korea, and Mexico, all targeted by Trump with stiff tariffs.

Oil demand in Europe and other Asian emerging economies, also targeted by Trump, proved more resilient.

The IEA sees the oil production exceeding demand in 2025, with output rising by 2.1 mbd to 105.1 mbd on average, while demand averages 103.7 mbd.

In 2026, it sees demand rising by a tepid 0.72 mbd to 104.4 mbd. Meanwhile, supply is expected to rise by 1.3 mbd to 106.4 mbd.

 

AFP

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