Surging inflation has driven day to day costs increasingly higher this year, sparking widespread concerns that a global recession is imminent.
Soaring fuel prices are expected to continue pinching household budgets, having plunged major economies into unprecedented energy crises.
Europe in particular is feeling the pain, with the war in Ukraine exacerbating the regions existing energy crisis, with supply constraints pushing wholesale natural gas prices to record highs.
However, things could be about to get even worse, according to Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Speaking at the Singapore Energy Week conference on Tuesday, Birol warned the world was currently facing the first truly global energy crisis thanks to tightening natural gas and oil markets.
Birol said a potential rebound in Chinese demand for natural gas, combined with rising imports of the fuel to Europe, meant the market would tighten next year.
Simultaneously, the oil market was set to tighten as major producers slash supply, the IEA chief said.
Global oil consumption is projected to grow by 1.9 million barrels per day this year and 1.7 million barrels per day in 2023, the IEA said in the latest installation of its flagship Oil Market Report. Although the organization cut its demand growth projections earlier this month, OPEC+a coalition of major oil producing countriesagreed in recent weeks to coordinated production cuts, slashing supply in an already tight market.
The move, which will cut 2% of the global oil supply and was slammed as shortsighted by the Biden administration, was labeled risky on Tuesday by the IEAs Birol.
Several economies around the world are on the brink of a recession, he said. I found this decision really unfortunate.
Reliance on Russian oil
Birol also said Tuesday that the world needed Russian oil to flow into the market in order to ensure rising demand could be met.
G7 nations are currently working to impose a price cap on Russian crude exports in a bid to step up economic pressure on the Kremlin following the invasion of Ukraine. According to reports, however, U.S. officials believe Moscow could find avenues to flout the price cap, meaning up to 90% of its oil shipments could evade the policy.
Reuters reported Tuesday that the IEA chief said this could actually be a positive thing in light of the current state of the market.
I think this is good because the world still needs Russian oil to flow into the market for now, Birol said, according to the news agency. An 80% to 90% is [a] good and encouraging level in order to meet the demand.
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