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Business / Energy

Oil rebalancing unlikely until end 2017: Shell

Published: 31 Aug 2016 - 12:04 am | Last Updated: 02 Nov 2021 - 07:28 am

STAVANGER: The huge global oil oversupply that has weighed on prices for the past two years may not clear until the second half of 2017, Shell’s Chief Energy Adviser Wim Thomas said.
The potential return to the market of some 1.5 million barrels per day of supply from Libya and Nigeria and uncertainty about Iranian and Iraqi production levels could push a rebalancing further away than many in the oil industry are hoping. “All these things when they come back on the market can again postpone the true balancing,” Thomas said in Stavanger, Norway.
He said the most optimistic scenario was for rebalancing, meaning that huge volumes of stored crude have to be absorbed, to kick in this year and that Shell was prepared for all outcomes. “It can happen any time between the second half of this year and the second half of next year.”
Oil prices fell more than 70 percent from 2014 highs earlier this year and are still more than 50 percent below those levels as a fierce battle for market share between major producers has flooded the world with oil.

Reuters

STAVANGER: The huge global oil oversupply that has weighed on prices for the past two years may not clear until the second half of 2017, Shell’s Chief Energy Adviser Wim Thomas said.
The potential return to the market of some 1.5 million barrels per day of supply from Libya and Nigeria and uncertainty about Iranian and Iraqi production levels could push a rebalancing further away than many in the oil industry are hoping. “All these things when they come back on the market can again postpone the true balancing,” Thomas said in Stavanger, Norway.
He said the most optimistic scenario was for rebalancing, meaning that huge volumes of stored crude have to be absorbed, to kick in this year and that Shell was prepared for all outcomes. “It can happen any time between the second half of this year and the second half of next year.”
Oil prices fell more than 70 percent from 2014 highs earlier this year and are still more than 50 percent below those levels as a fierce battle for market share between major producers has flooded the world with oil.

Reuters