{"id":2851347,"version":0,"headline":"Opec downgrades 2026 oil demand forecast","dateModified":"2026-07-13T15:24:12Z","datePublished":"2026-07-13T12:00:00Z","articleBody":"<article><p class=\"lead\">Opec has downgraded its 2026 global oil demand forecast for a third month in a row, while raising its projection for next year.</p><p>In its latest <i>Monthly Oil Market Report</i> (MOMR), the group revised down its oil demand projection for this year by 190,000 b/d to 780,000 b/d, which would leave total consumption at 105.94mn b/d.</p><p>Opec did not give a clear reason for the downgrade. But it follows several months of global economic instability, spurred by the US-Iran war.</p><p>The downgrades to demand were mainly driven by China and India, which saw their oil consumption forecasts cut by 110,000 b/d and 60,000 b/d, respectively.</p><p>But Opec has upgraded its oil demand growth forecasts for 2027 by 210,000 b/d to 1.73mn b/d, which would leave total consumption for the year at 107.86mn b/d.</p><p>Opec's global demand forecasts are much higher than those of the IEA, which sees oil demand declining by 1mn b/d to 103.5mn b/d in 2026, largely due to the US-Iran war.</p><p>Opec kept its non-Opec+ supply growth forecast broadly unchanged 640,000 b/d and 620,000 b/d. It does not forecast Opec+ production but publishes estimates from secondary sources, which include <i>Argus</i>. These show Opec+ crude output — including Mexico — rose by 2.999mn b/d to 36.278mn b/d in June, which remain around 6.5mn b/d down on pre-war levels.</p><p>Should oil production in the Mideast Gulf remain constrained at anything close to current levels, Opec's demand figures imply a large supply deficit this year.</p><p class=\"bylines\">By Aydin Calik and Parie Desai</p></article>","dateline":"London, 13 July (Argus)","license":"<footer><p><br> Send comments and request more information at <a href=\"mailto:feedback@argusmedia.com?subject=Argus Direct article feedback&body=I am contacting you regarding Opec downgrades 2026 oil demand forecast, available at http://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/cs-24796403.\" target=\"_parent\"> feedback@argusmedia.com </a></p><p><i> Copyright © 2026. <a href=\"http://www.argusmedia.com/\" target=\"_blank\">Argus Media group</a>. All rights reserved. </i></p></footer>","copyrightHolder":"Argus Media group","copyrightYear":2026,"taxonomy":{"contexts":[{"name":"Fundamentals","children":[{"name":"Demand","children":[]},{"name":"Supply","children":[]}]},{"name":"Opec","children":[]}],"regions":[{"name":"Global","children":[]}],"sectors":[{"name":"Crude oil","children":[]}]},"pullQuote":null,"newsType":"Daily news","language":"en-GB","keywords":null,"isFree":true,"isFeatured":true,"body":"<p class=\"lead\">Opec has downgraded its 2026 global oil demand forecast for a third month in a row, while raising its projection for next year.</p><p>In its latest <i>Monthly Oil Market Report</i> (MOMR), the group revised down its oil demand projection for this year by 190,000 b/d to 780,000 b/d, which would leave total consumption at 105.94mn b/d.</p><p>Opec did not give a clear reason for the downgrade. But it follows several months of global economic instability, spurred by the US-Iran war.</p><p>The downgrades to demand were mainly driven by China and India, which saw their oil consumption forecasts cut by 110,000 b/d and 60,000 b/d, respectively.</p><p>But Opec has upgraded its oil demand growth forecasts for 2027 by 210,000 b/d to 1.73mn b/d, which would leave total consumption for the year at 107.86mn b/d.</p><p>Opec's global demand forecasts are much higher than those of the IEA, which sees oil demand declining by 1mn b/d to 103.5mn b/d in 2026, largely due to the US-Iran war.</p><p>Opec kept its non-Opec+ supply growth forecast broadly unchanged 640,000 b/d and 620,000 b/d. It does not forecast Opec+ production but publishes estimates from secondary sources, which include <i>Argus</i>. These show Opec+ crude output — including Mexico — rose by 2.999mn b/d to 36.278mn b/d in June, which remain around 6.5mn b/d down on pre-war levels.</p><p>Should oil production in the Mideast Gulf remain constrained at anything close to current levels, Opec's demand figures imply a large supply deficit this year.</p><p class=\"bylines\">By Aydin Calik and Parie Desai</p>","lead":"Opec has downgraded its 2026 global oil demand forecast for a third month in a row, while raising its projection for next year.","cmsId":"24796403","source":"Censhare"}