by funzone36 » Fri 11 Apr 2008, 19:25:39
Just like I predicted, the new IEA report that came out just today has this to say:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')rude futures set new records above $110/bbl in early April, driven by
tight distillate markets, strong non-OECD imports and a weaker dollar.
Refining margins remain extremely volatile, reverting into positive
territory in recent weeks following a large US gasoline stock draw,
which has tightened regional supplies.
• Global oil product demand has been revised down by 310 kb/d in 2008
to 87.2 mb/d following the downgrading of global GDP prospects by the
IMF, coupled with a change in FSU methodology and baseline data
revisions. By the same token, 2007 demand is up by 140 kb/d over last
month’s report to 86.0 mb/d. As a result of these divergent shifts, demand
growth in 2008 is now expected at almost 1.3 mb/d or 1.5% over 2007.
• Global oil supply fell by 100 kb/d in March to 87.3 mb/d, led by lower
supplies last month from OPEC, the North Sea and non-OPEC Africa.
Non-OPEC supply growth in 2008 is trimmed to 815 kb/d on a broad
swathe of adjustments in the Americas, Africa and Europe.
• OPEC crude supply fell by 265 kb/d in March to 32.1 mb/d, on field
maintenance in UAE, Nigeria and Venezuela. Pipeline/power outages
highlighted ongoing risks to production in Iraq and Nigeria amid
effective spare capacity of just 2.3 mb/d. Weaker economic growth cuts
the 2008 call on OPEC by 0.3 mb/d to 31.6 mb/d.
• OECD total industry stocks fell by 48.9 mb in February, to 2,579 mb,
offsetting a similar rise in January. The February draw leaves inventories
At 53.3 days of forward demand. With preliminary data indicating a
build of just 6.3 mb in March, OECD end-1Q08 stocks remain close to
end-December levels.
• Global refinery throughput weakened in March, as poor margins
curbed crude runs in all OECD regions. Estimated 1Q08 global
throughput is unchanged at 74.0 mb/d. However, 2Q08 estimates have
been cut by 0.2 mb/d to 73.7 mb/d, in line with weaker demand.
http://omrpublic.iea.org/currentissues/high.pdf
I can't imagine total liquids production to be higher than 87.5 million barrels per day especially when the IMF is downgrading GDP growth prospects.