Global Demand for Oil Expected to Plummet

Consumption will drop in consecutive years; first time in 3 decades
By John Johnson,  Newser Staff
Posted Dec 9, 2008 6:03 PM CST
Global Demand for Oil Expected to Plummet
People work at an installation at the Zubair Moshrif oil field southeast of Baghdad.   (AP Photo)

The price of oil continued its descent today, settling at $42.07 a barrel amid new signs of collapsing demand worldwide, the Financial Times reports. Global consumption will shrink by 50,000 barrels a day in 2008 and by a whopping 450,000 barrels a day in 2009, the Energy Department says. Meanwhile, prices aren't expected to return to the sky-high levels of this summer for the foreseeable future.

The drop in global demand in consecutive years will be the first such decline in 30 years, and US consumption alone is expected to drop to an 11-year low next year. The World Bank said the commodities boom of the past five years has "come to an end." It said the price of oil might increase to $75 a barrel over the next three years.
(More Big Oil stories.)

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