Sign Up for FREE Daily Energy News
Canadian Flag CDN NEWS  |  US Flag US NEWS  | TIMELY. FOCUSED. RELEVANT. FREE
  • Stay Connected
  • linkedin
  • twitter
  • facebook
  • youtube2
BREAKING NEWS:

Copper Tip Energy Services
Hazloc Heaters
Hazloc Heaters
Copper Tip Energy


World Oil Demand, U.S. supply to Grow More Slowly on Tariff Tensions, IEA Says


These translations are done via Google Translate

Summary

• IEA cuts 2025 demand growth forecast by about 300,000 bpd
• Sees further slowdown in demand growth next year
• Joins OPEC in cutting oil demand view
• Trims U.S. oil output forecast for 2025

(Reuters) – Global oil demand will grow much more slowly than expected this year and U.S. production increases will also taper off, due to U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on trading partners and their retaliatory moves, the International Energy Agency said.

Trump’s tariffs, along with a supply hike by OPEC+ producers, have driven a steep slide in oil prices, cutting revenue for producers. The U.S. oil industry, despite calls by Trump to “drill baby drill”, may actually slow activity, the IEA said.

World oil demand this year will rise by 730,000 barrels per day, the IEA, which advises industrialised countries, said in a monthly report, a sharp cut from 1.03 million bpd expected last month. The reduction is larger than a cut made on Monday by producer group OPEC.

“The deteriorating outlook for the global economy amid the sudden sharp escalation in trade tensions in early April has prompted a downgrade to our forecast for oil demand growth this year,” the IEA said.

“Roughly half of this downgrade occurs in the United States and China, with most of the remainder in trade-oriented Asian economies.”
In its first look at 2026, the IEA predicted a further slowdown in demand growth to 690,000 bpd, due to a fragile economic backdrop and growing penetration of electric vehicles.

In China, economic challenges and a shift towards EVs are tempering oil growth prospects in the world’s second-largest consumer, which had driven rises in oil consumption for years.

Global oil prices have dropped by 13% this month to around $64 a barrel, pressured by trade tensions and the decision of OPEC+ producers to accelerate a supply hike in May. Crude edged lower on Tuesday after the IEA report’s release.

POLICY RESPONSES

ROO.AI Oil and Gas Field Service Software
GLJ
Tarco | Delivering Engineered Solutions

Oil-dependent governments are coming under pressure from the price slide, with officials preparing policy responses for a drop in revenue such as issuing more debt and reducing spending.

The drop is also a challenge for U.S. shale producers, who over the last two decades helped to turn the United States into the world’s largest producer.

“The significant drop in oil prices rattled the U.S. shale patch,” the IEA said. “New tariffs may also make it more expensive to buy steel and equipment, further discouraging drilling.”

Together with the impact of Chinese tariffs on imports of U.S. ethane and liquefied petroleum gas, these factors prompted the IEA to cut its U.S. oil supply forecast by 150,000 bpd this year to growth of 490,000 bpd.

Nonetheless, conventional oil projects remain on track, the IEA said, and it sees total supply from outside OPEC+ rising by 1.3 million bpd in 2025, comfortably above the rate of demand growth and suggesting a sizeable surplus.

The IEA’s reduction in its 2025 oil demand forecast follows a similar move by OPEC on Monday, although the Paris-based IEA’s reduction is more drastic.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries lowered its forecasts for oil demand this year and next to 1.30 million bpd and 1.28 million bpd respectively. These were both down 150,000 bpd from last month’s figures.

OPEC’s oil demand view is at the higher end of industry forecasts and it expects oil use to keep rising for years, unlike the IEA, which sees demand peaking this decade as the world switches to cleaner fuels.

 

Share This:




More News Articles


GET ENERGYNOW’S DAILY EMAIL FOR FREE