Oil Prices Surge Amid Middle East Tensions, Prompting Concerns Over Demand Destruction
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Oil Prices Surge Amid Middle East Tensions, Prompting Concerns Over Demand Destruction

Summary

Higher crude prices following conflict in the Middle East have led analysts to warn of a sustained decline in oil demand, a phenomenon known as demand destruction.

Oil prices have risen sharply after the conflict that began on Feb. 28, when Israel and the United States launched attacks on Iran, disrupting traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. The price increase has prompted industry analysts to warn that sustained high costs could lead to a lasting reduction in oil consumption, a scenario referred to as “demand destruction.”

Goldman Sachs analysts noted in March that oil trading above $100 a barrel is linked to more pronounced demand destruction, while the International Energy Agency projected a drop of 1.5 million barrels per day in demand for the current quarter and said the effect could spread as scarcity and higher prices continue.

Catherine Wolfram, a professor of energy economics at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, said the term is not a formal economic concept but is commonly used by traders and financial market participants to describe the trend.

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