Global oil demand has been running much faster than previously thought over the last three years, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said today.
The shift is just the latest in a series of revisions by the IEA and other analysts to correct cautious estimates of demand, which earlier this year distorted oil markets by encouraging OPEC producers to cut back supplies more than necessary.
Revisions to world demand estimates since 2002, mainly in non-OECD countries, have pushed the forecast for this year up by 750,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 82.2 million bpd, the IEA said in its monthly Oil Market Report.
The revisions have given a higher baseline for oil demand growth that is running at its fastest level in 24 years. The IEA left its demand growth forecasts unchanged at 2.5 million bpd for 2004 and 1.8 million bpd for 2005.
Strong demand growth, particularly in China and the United States has helped push oil prices to record highs, with US crude last night breaching $45 for the first time in the 21-year history of New York Mercantile Exchange futures.
The pace of consumption has caught out both analysts and producers in the OPEC cartel who early this year cut back supplies because they feared otherwise surplus inventories would build and bring down prices.
The upward demand revisions mean that the IEA has now revised up its estimate for the likely total demand, or 'call' for OPEC's oil this year, by 400,000 bpd to 27.6 million bpd.
OPEC is producing more than 29 million bpd, the IEA estimates, near its highest level for a quarter of a century and leaving it with little spare capacity to cope with any supply disruption.
The IEA said OPEC's effective sustainable spare production capacity shrank to 600,000 bpd in July as the cartel raised output.
That leaves a cushion of under 1 per cent on world markets, compared to about 8 per cent in 2002 when spare capacity was 6 million to 7 million bpd.