Global demand for oil products has pulled up stronger, recovering this year, however, suppressed kerosene demand from the aviation sector is a major barrier to full recovery, according to GlobalData
GlobalData’s analysis of oil product flows indicate that when kerosene is excluded, oil product demand in Q3 2021 fully recovered compared to the same period in 2019.
Throughout the year, demand for kerosene, which is mostly used for jet fuel, has hovered at around two thirds of pre-COVID-19 levels. As a result, including this in the analysis of product flows means total oil product demand declined by 3% below pre-COVID levels for Q3 2021, GlobalData said.
Will Scargill, Managing Energy Analyst at GlobalData, commented: “China has been the driver for the global demand recovery, led by gasoline in the transport sector and continued growth in naphtha and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) as the country expands its petrochemicals sector.
“Other major economies are still yet to see demand fully recover to pre-COVID-19 levels, but the strength of China’s growth plugs the gap. Still, the depressed aviation sector means a significant global demand shortfall, leaving open the prospect that we may have already seen peak oil demand— given the acceleration of energy transition to renewables.”
Will Scargill, Managing Energy Analyst
Diesel and Kerosene Yet to See Full Demand recovery
The two oil products, diesel and Kerosene are both yet to see demand fully recover to 2019 levels. Major consuming countries like China has not provided the same boost for diesel as other products, as the country’s use was already subdued pre-COVID-19 while global demand in Q3 2021 remained around 4 percent below 2019 levels.
“Chinese diesel demand appears to have peaked in 2015 amid moderating economic growth and a switch to cleaner fuels. Meanwhile, in developed economies road transport activity has not fully recovered and the important European market is increasingly turning away from diesel vehicles due to air quality concerns.”
Will Scargill, Managing Energy analyst
In the past year, kerosene demand witnessed the greatest impact from COVID-19 due to restrictions on air travel. While the sector recovered, to an extent, in the second half of 2020, recovery has stalled heavily this year amid waves of infections and restrictions— with new restrictions linked to the Omicron variant likely to hit demand again in Q4 2021.
Nick Wyatt, Head of Research for Travel & Tourism at GlobalData commented: “Continued restrictions will have a negative impact on demand for air travel. The conundrum facing airlines is deciding how much capacity to keep online in the short term.
“Low load factors impact profitability and many airlines are not in a position to absorb loss-making flights. Consequently, there is a risk that they will err on the side of caution and ground some of their fleets to reduce running costs if they see demand softening.”
Niick Wyatt, Head of Research for Travel and Tourism
Countries across the globe that rely heavily on the travel and tourism sector are likely to be hit the hardest as the impact of the Omicron variant continues to be felt in a dozen and more countries.
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