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IEA downgrades again
Worse-than-expected prospects for the world economy has prompted the International Energy Agency (IEA) to again revise downward global oil demand for 2009. In its Monthly Oil Report, issued in Paris, the IEA said that “after a flurry of downward adjustments by both public and private forecasters,” oil demand for 2009 has been revised down by one million barrels per day, to 83.4 million barrels per day. This is a drop of 2.8 percent compared to 2008, the IEA said. Global GDP is now expected to contract by 1.4 percent in 2009, with the 30 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) especially hard-hit. “OECD countries are set to face an unusually severe recession, with overall GDP contracting by 3.9 percent,” the IEA said. “Consequently, oil demand (for the OECD) is now forecast at 45.2 million barrels per day.” That is about 760,000 barrels per day lower than the previous IEA estimate and a drop of 4.2 percent over last year, the IEA said. RWE inks MoU for exploration in Azerbaijan Beijing sees ESPO completed end-201 Elektrik Uretim, Korea Electric Power ink deal EU on target to meet 2020 renewable goals E.ON cautious about outlook after posting profit fall blog comments powered by Disqus |
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