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Oil & Gas

Tuesday
15 Oct 2024

OPEC Trims Its China Crude Demand Forecast, but Nowhere Near Enough: Russell

15 Oct 2024  by Reuters   

An aerial view shows tugboats helping a crude oil tanker to berth at an oil terminal, off Waidiao Island in Zhoushan, Zhejiang province, China July 18, 2022

OPEC cut its estimate for China's crude oil demand growth in 2024 for a third straight month in October, but the producer group is still massively optimistic given the reality of falling imports.

The latest monthly report by Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) said China's crude oil demand will expand by 580,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2024.

This estimate is down from the 650,000 bpd gain forecast in September, and is also 180,000 bpd below the rise of 760,000 bpd OPEC was predicting in July for the world's biggest oil importer.

While OPEC is edging closer to reality, its demand forecast is hugely out of kilter with China's falling imports.

Official customs data released on Monday showed China's crude arrivals at 11.07 million bpd in September, down 0.6% from the same month in 2023 and the fifth straight month that imports dropped from the year before.

For the first three quarters of 2024, China's crude imports were 10.99 million bpd, down 2.8% from the 11.34 million bpd in the same period in 2023.

Imports are down 350,000 bpd in the first nine months of 2024, a figure that makes even OPEC's lowered demand forecast seem hopelessly wrong.

Of course, crude oil imports are only one element of total demand, others include any increase in domestic output or changes in inventory levels.

China's domestic oil output is up so far in 2024, with production in the first eight months coming in at 4.29 million bpd, which is 70,000 bpd above the same period in 2023.

But the increase in domestic output is still well below the decline in crude imports.

China doesn't disclose the volume of crude it holds in commercial and strategic stockpiles, but it's certain that they have been adding to them so far in 2024, rather than drawing down.

An estimate can be made of the volume of crude available for storage by subtracting the amount of crude processed from the combined total of oil available from imports and domestic output.


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