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Oil Prices Are ‘Nowhere Near’ Peak Yet, Says Key OPEC Member UAE

Published 06/08/2022, 07:04 AM
Updated 06/08/2022, 07:36 AM
© Bloomberg. Vehicles travel along a road in Beijing, China, on Tuesday, June 7, 2022. As Beijing relaxes Covid curbs and allows indoor dining again, restaurants are betting that customers will be back in droves, boosting demand for everything from meat to cooking oils.

(Bloomberg) --

Oil prices haven’t peaked yet because Chinese demand has yet to return to normal, said the energy minister from key OPEC member the United Arab Emirates.

The comments indicate that consumers can expect little respite from the soaring cost of energy. The UAE is the third largest producer in OPEC and one of the few countries in the world with the capacity to significantly increase crude output, yet it expects supply scarcity to worsen.

“If we continue consuming, with the pace of consumption we have we are nowhere near the peak, because China is not back yet,” UAE Energy Minister Suhail Al-Mazrouei said at a conference on Wednesday in Jordan. “China will come with more consumption.”

Al-Mazrouei warned that without more investment across the globe, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies are not able to guarantee sufficient supplies of oil as demand fully recovers from the coronavirus pandemic. 

The group agreed last week to open its oil taps a little faster in the summer months. That modest supply boost amounts to just 0.4% of global demand over July and August and comes after several months in which OPEC+ has struggled to hit its production targets. 

“We’re lagging by almost 2.6 million barrels a day, and that’s a lot,” Al Mazrouei said.

Only Saudi Arabia and the UAE have significant volumes of idle production capacity, but even that is only enough to offset a portion of the supply gap created by sanctions on Russia. 

 “The situation is not very encouraging when it comes to the quantities that we can bring,” Al Mazrouei said. 

 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

© Bloomberg. Vehicles travel along a road in Beijing, China, on Tuesday, June 7, 2022. As Beijing relaxes Covid curbs and allows indoor dining again, restaurants are betting that customers will be back in droves, boosting demand for everything from meat to cooking oils.

Latest comments

Sri Lanka became bankrupt, Pakistan is about to bankrupt and many more will come . Enough is enough now.
Fuxk u arabian moron. High oil price will increase the inflation. Have a pity to poor ppl u stupid
do you have a great ideas to stop this oil price increase? some ppl are doing there best to solve this. so please don't say that this ppl are stupid.
225 usd.
These arabs are really silly.. there is oil to give and sell.. all russian oil will be bought cheap by china and india.. stop speculating because we are on the way to a big recession because of the arabs..
And where the peak will be ?
And where the peak will be ?
Thanks to Joe Biden's war on domestic fossil fuel production and investment, U.S. can't help offset the loss of Russian oil.
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