Oil Demand Growth in 2010 to Be Led by China
By wchung | 07 Mar, 2025
World oil demand will rise this year due to surging economic activity in Asian countries, especially China, the International Energy Agency said Friday as it bumped up its forecasts.
The Paris-based IEA, which advises oil-consuming countries, predicted in its monthly report that oil demand will average 86.6 million barrels a day this year, or 1.6 million barrels a day more than in 2009.
The IEA’s previous report, in February, had estimated daily demand in 2010 of 86.5 million barrels. The estimate for 2009 was revised upwards to 85 million barrels a day.
The agency said that after five consecutive quarters of decline, “the latest data confirm that global oil demand resumed growth on a yearly basis in the fourth quarter of 2009.”
Oil demand in developed economies will fall 0.3 percent in 2010, but this will be offset by higher demand in Asia, the IEA said.
“China is currently expected to account for almost a third of global oil demand growth in 2010,” the IEA said.
Global oil demand fell 1.4 percent last year compared to 2008, as the Great Recession caused oil demand in OECD countries to drop by the biggest amount since the early 1980s.
While oil demand in OECD countries is seen contracting in 2010 for the fifth consecutive year, growth in developing countries is more than picking up the slack, the IEA said.
“This year’s global oil demand growth will be driven entirely by non-OECD countries, with non-OECD Asia alone representing over half of total growth,” the IEA said.
Global oil demand hit an all-time peak in 2007 at 86.5 million barrels a day.
This year’s rebound is forecast to be driven by China, where the IEA said preliminary data indicated that demand “surged by an astonishing 28 percent year-on-year in January.”
GREG KELLER, AP Business Writer PARIS
Articles
- Kamala's Dilemma: California 2026 or White House 2028
- Current Generation of Asian American Astronauts
- Donald and JD Forget to Thank Volodymyr for Degrading Russia Threat
- Cal Students' AI Fight Club Makes Tech Giants Sweat in Free-for-All
- Chinese Dominate US Money Laundering Business with Three-Nation Scheme
Asian American Success Stories
- The 130 Most Inspiring Asian Americans of All Time
- 12 Most Brilliant Asian Americans
- Greatest Asian American War Heroes
- Asian American Digital Pioneers
- New Asian American Imagemakers
- Asian American Innovators
- The 20 Most Inspiring Asian Sports Stars
- 5 Most Daring Asian Americans
- Surprising Superstars
- TV’s Hottest Asians
- 100 Greatest Asian American Entrepreneurs
- Asian American Wonder Women
- Greatest Asian American Rags-to-Riches Stories
- Notable Asian American Professionals