Coronavirus surge, renewed lockdowns fan fresh worries
about global fuel demand
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[July 17, 2020]
By Ahmad Ghaddar, Stephanie Kelly and Laura Sanicola
LONDON/
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Surges in coronavirus infections are slowing a
recovery in fuel use from the doldrums of lockdowns in the United States
and other countries, raising concern it could be years before
consumption rebounds from the impact of the pandemic.
Global fuel demand fell by around a quarter at the peak of the
lockdowns, when over 4 billion people worldwide were asked to stay at
home. The unprecedented decline in demand forced producers to make
record output cuts and pump hundreds of millions of barrels of oil into
storage.
Fuel consumption and oil prices had recovered some ground as governments
relaxed restrictions on population movements and the output cuts stemmed
the glut.
That recovery is stalling, however, as infections swing upward in top
fuel consumer the United States, as well as in other major economies
such as Brazil and India.
In the week ended July 11, U.S. retail gasoline demand fell 5% from the
previous week, according to GasBuddy, which tracks real-time retail
gasoline purchases, after several states reimposed restrictions to
control outbreaks of COVID-19. Demand also fell the week before, the
first time since lockdowns began in March that it dropped for two
straight weeks.
"Normally this two-week period would have been the peak demand period
and we didn’t get it," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital in
New York. "The recovery has been unwinding."
The surge in U.S. virus cases is happening in some of the most populous
states including California, Texas and Florida, which account for more
than one-quarter of U.S. gasoline consumption.
U.S. gasoline demand pre-pandemic was around 9 million barrels per day
(bpd), or around 9% of global oil supply, according to U.S. government
data.
Driving in major U.S. cities with rising infection rates dropped in
July, including in Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Miami, according to Dutch
location technology company TomTom.
Traffic in Houston, Texas, had recovered in early June, but it has now
dropped to where it was at the depth of the lockdown in April, TomTom
showed.
(GRAPHIC:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/oakveawarvr/index.html)
The U.S. Northeast, another major fuel-consuming region that took the
brunt of the infections in the spring, is coming out of stringent
lockdowns cautiously, which is expected to temper gasoline demand.
ELSEWHERE
Gasoline demand rose nearly 3 million bpd worldwide in June compared
with May, the largest month-on-month increase on record, according to
the International Energy Agency.
But markets are concerned that some countries could be hit with a
U.S.-style surge in cases in later waves of the pandemic.
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Pump nozzles are
pictured at a gas station in Algiers, Algeria April 21, 2020.
REUTERS/Ramzi Boudina
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries said a second wave of
cases could cause demand to fall by 11 million bpd this year, according to
internal OPEC research seen by Reuters. The current expectation was for a
year-over-year drop of 9 million bpd.
OPEC already cut supply by an historic 9.7 million bpd to try to bring output in
line with lower demand and support prices.
"If the second wave materializes, global oil demand will recover much more
slowly in 2021, dragging the pandemic's market effect further in time," Rystad
Energy analysts said.
FEWER RESTRICTIONS
India has more than 1 million cases, third-most worldwide, and is seeing a
renewed surge in infection after government lockdowns ended in June. Authorities
have instituted lockdowns in several states across the country, but not
nationwide.
More than 2 million people have contracted coronavirus in Brazil, second-most in
the world, and infection rates are accelerating. That nation's leader, Jair
Bolsonaro, has resisted calls for a lockdown, even after he tested positive for
the virus.
Graphic: IEA Lockdows vs Coronavirus Cases
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/bdwvkamzkvm/
IEALockdowns.PNG
Australia, Spain, China and Britain are also among some of the major countries
to enforce local lockdowns in recent weeks to control outbreaks of the disease.
In the United Kingdom, the government imposed a full local lockdown in Leicester
last month because of a rise in coronavirus cases even as nationwide
restrictions were loosened. Traffic in Leicester has dropped to April's level of
activity when the nation was under strict lockdown, data showed.
Graphic: Oil Demand Second Coronavirus Wave Scenario
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com
/gfx/ce/gjnvwwoxmvw/
Rystad2ndWave.PNG
(Reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar and Bozorgmehr Sharafedin in London, Stephanie
Kelly, Laura Sanicola and Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York, and Sonali Paul in
Melbourne; Editing by Tom Browm)
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