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IEA cuts 2015 oil demand outlook

Paris - Global appetite for oil will grow at a slower pace in 2015 than earlier thought despite plunging crude prices, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Friday, warning that further drops in prices heighten the risk of social instability in some oil producing countries.

Oil demand for 2015 was now expected to grow by 0.9 million barrels a day to reach 93.3 million barrels, some 230 000 barrels less than the previous forecast, it said.

Crude prices have collapsed by more than 40 percent since June, and are now trading around $60 - levels last seen five years ago, as increased US shale production adds to oversupply.

But the cheap oil was not prompting more consumption.

Market share lost to renewable energy sources was unlikely to be replaced again by cheaper crude, the IEA said.

In the OECD rich countries, "a tepid economic recovery, weak wage growth and ... deflationary pressures will further blunt the stimulus of lower prices," it added.

Any boost that cheaper crude could give to oil importing economies would be offset - if not more than offset - by the damage done to oil producers.

In focus is Russia, which is hammered by the double whammy of sliding oil revenues and Western sanctions.

The IEA said it was making the biggest cut to Russian demand, now expecting it to drop to 3.4 million barrels a day, 195 000 barrels below last month's estimate.

"Lower oil prices significantly dent potential export revenues in net oil exporting countries, slashing their income streams and in turn denting demand.

"In particularly cash-strapped economies, such as Venezuela and Russia, this impact is likely to be magnified as the risk of default escalates," said the IEA.

"The resulting downward price pressure would raise the risk of social instability or financial difficulties if producers found it difficult to pay back debt," it added.

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