Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Opec stands by predictions for oil demand growth

Highway traffic in California. Opec said the upcoming 'driving season' in the US will provide the usual additional demand for fuel Alamy/Radek Hofman via Reuters
Highway traffic in California. Opec said the upcoming 'driving season' in the US will provide the usual additional demand for fuel
  • Robust summer demand expected
  • Wide split between forecasts
  • Output cut decision in June

Opec predicts robust fuel use this summer and has stuck to last month’s forecast of relatively strong growth in oil demand in 2024 and 2025.

The oil producers’ organisation predicted in its monthly report that global demand will rise by 2.25 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024 and by 1.85 million bpd in 2025.

A boost to economic growth could give extra tailwind to oil prices, which have rallied above $90 a barrel this year because of tighter supply and war in the Middle East.



Opec and its allies, known as Opec+, agreed last week to keep oil output cuts in place until the end of June.

“Despite some downside risks, the continuation of the momentum seen in the beginning of the year could result in further upside potential for global economic growth in 2024,” Opec said in the report.

In the summer, when fuel demand rises seasonally as people travel more, Opec said demand for kerosene, which is used in jets, will rise by 600,000 bpd year on year in the second quarter, gasoline by 400,000 bpd and diesel by 200,000 bpd.

Opec said the US economy would give the traditional summer boost to fuel demand.

“The upcoming driving season in the US is expected to provide the usual additional demand for transportation fuels,” Opec said.

After last week’s meeting of a panel of Opec+ ministers, the full group will meet in June to decide whether to extend output cuts further or return some supply to the market.

There is a wider than usual split between various forecasters on the strength of oil demand growth in 2024, partly due to differences over the pace of the world’s transition to cleaner fuels.

This week the energy trader Vitol said demand will rise by 1.9 million bpd in 2024, not far from Opec’s view, while the US government cut its growth prediction to 950,000 bpd.

The International Energy Agency, which represents industrialised countries, and which forecasts that oil demand will peak by 2030, also trimmed its forecast for 2024 oil demand growth on Friday, citing lower than expected consumption in OECD countries and a slump in factory activity.

The Paris-based energy watchdog lowered its growth outlook for this year by 130,000 bpd to 1.2 million bpd, adding that the release of pent-up demand by China after easing Covid-19 curbs had run its course.

Opec believes oil use will keep rising for the next two decades. It has not forecast a peak.

Latest articles

An extension of Diriyah's Bujairi Terrace, a popular nightspot, will open in November

Diriyah giga-project to open first hotel in November

Diriyah, one of Saudi Arabia’s leading giga-projects, will finally open its first hotel in November along with other attractions and sites, its CEO said this week.  “This November we’ll open another few kilometres of parks, we’ll open our first Bab Samhan hotel, we’ll open our first museum which is the Diriyah Art Futures Museum, we’ll […]

King Abdulaziz International Airport: the number of international flights increased but there were less than 27.4 million international visitors to the kingdom last year

Passenger numbers rise 26% in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia said this week that its total number of air passengers rose 26 percent to 112 million in 2023. This includes a 46 percent rise in the total number of international travellers to 61 million.  The number means the kingdom’s airports are approaching full capacity, which is 116 million passengers a year, including 45 […]

Tourists visit the tombs of the Nabatean civilisation in AlUla. Saudi Arabia's goal is for tourism to make up 10 percent of GDP by 2030

Affluent tourists around the globe on Saudi Arabia’s radar

Saudi Arabia will invest more than $800 billion in its main giga-projects by the next decade as part of a tourism expansion strategy focused on affluent tourists in China, India and Europe.  The kingdom’s tourism minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb, speaking at the Qatar Investment Forum, said: “We’re building and investing in major destinations like Neom, Red […]

The funds stolen from cryptocurrency exchange Rain were converted into Bitcoin and Ethereum to disguise their origin

Crypto exchange Rain suffers $15m hack

Rain, a cryptocurrency exchange regulated in both the UAE and Bahrain, has confirmed a serious hack resulting in losses reportedly nearing $15 million.  The exchange said in a statement on its website on Tuesday that customer funds remain secure despite the incident.  The security breach occurred on April 29 and was first detected by blockchain […]