October 17, 2025
BUSINESS

Oil market heads towards rebalancing – OPEC Published January 18, 2018 After long years of punishingly low oil prices, the global oil market is moving closer to reaching a healthy balance between supply and demand, OPEC said on Thursday. In its monthly oil market report, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said there were “growing indications that the oil market is heading smoothly toward rebalancing.” Prices were being buoyed by lower crude oil stocks, healthy demand and geopolitical tensions, the cartel said. Oil prices have risen in recent months, after OPEC and a clutch of countries outside the cartel struck a landmark deal at the end of 2016 to cut back production to combat a global oil glut. At a meeting in Vienna at the end of November, the oil-producing nations agreed to extend that deal until the end of 2018. As a result, oil prices have recently moved above the $70 mark, after hitting a 10-year low of less than $30 in January 2016. “In December, oil futures improved further to levels not seen since late 2014,” OPEC said. The agreement to extend the cutbacks, “as well as supply turbulences in the North Sea buoyed the sustained gains” in futures prices, it wrote. The Forties pipeline system, which normally carries 40 percent of UK oil and gas production in the North Sea, was recently hit by a cracked pipe. In its report, OPEC raised its estimate for global oil demand growth for last year, and said oil output would also continue to expand. The cartel said it expects world oil demand to have averaged 96.99 million barrels per day (bpd) last year, an upward revision that was “broadly a result of better-than-expected data for Europe and China.” For 2018, global oil consumption was projected to reach 98.51 million bpd. More inHome Communications minister attacks Ajimobi in letter to Buhari, Oyegun Cattle Colony: You’re not the owner of Kogi, Community leader warns Bello ‘How we plan to curb excesses of agberos in Lagos’ Gunmen abduct 14-year-old girl, shoot dead policeman in Katsina [PHOTOS] Nigerian banker gives birth inside plane en route New York On the supply side, OPEC said that the world oil supply was projected to have expanded to an average 57.79 million bpd in 2017. And it would grow further to 58.94 million bpd in 2018. “The US remains the key driver of non-OPEC supply growth,” as shale producers in the US ramp up production, OPEC said. AFP OIL PRICE OPEC Comments Communications minister attacks Ajimobi in letter to Buhari, Oyegun Cattle Colony: You’re not the owner of Kogi, Community leader warns Bello NEWS Ohanaeze youths ask herdsmen to leave South-East EFCC arraigns Justice Yunusa for alleged corruption Herdsmen destroy ex-naval chief’s farms, Taraba rejects cattle colony Court remands ex-gov’s son over money laundering I’ll jail corrupt public workers –Obiano Army seizes 63 bags of cannabis JUST IN Herdsmen killings: Buhari lacks power to remove Ortom, says SAN Messi misses penalty in Catalan derby defeat Nigerian pastors as 2019 opposition party Customs shoot man to death in Lagos, injure three We’ll reposition Arik to become a trailblazer – AMCON Ex-3SC star joins Swedish side Classic version marfeel logo © 1971-2017 The Punch newspaper 3′ FEATURED Communications minister attacks Ajimobi in letter to Buhari, Oyegun Published January 18, 2018 Olalekan Adetayo, Abuja 11′ FEATURED Herdsmen destroy ex-naval chief’s farms, Taraba rejects cattle colony Published January 18, 2018

After long years of punishingly low oil prices, the global oil market is moving closer to reaching a healthy balance between supply and demand, OPEC said on Thursday.

In its monthly oil market report, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said there were “growing indications that the oil market is heading smoothly toward rebalancing.”

Prices were being buoyed by lower crude oil stocks, healthy demand and geopolitical tensions, the cartel said.

Oil prices have risen in recent months, after OPEC and a clutch of countries outside the cartel struck a landmark deal at the end of 2016 to cut back production to combat a global oil glut.

At a meeting in Vienna at the end of November, the oil-producing nations agreed to extend that deal until the end of 2018.

As a result, oil prices have recently moved above the $70 mark, after hitting a 10-year low of less than $30 in January 2016.

“In December, oil futures improved further to levels not seen since late 2014,” OPEC said.

The agreement to extend the cutbacks, “as well as supply turbulences in the North Sea buoyed the sustained gains” in futures prices, it wrote.

The Forties pipeline system, which normally carries 40 percent of UK oil and gas production in the North Sea, was recently hit by a cracked pipe.

In its report, OPEC raised its estimate for global oil demand growth for last year, and said oil output would also continue to expand.

The cartel said it expects world oil demand to have averaged 96.99 million barrels per day (bpd) last year, an upward revision that was “broadly a result of better-than-expected data for Europe and China.”

For 2018, global oil consumption was projected to reach 98.51 million bpd.

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