Declining demand has been a regular feature of weekly statistical reports for some time. Our analysis of the numbers can be found here.
EIA analysis: a jump in oil demand
Categories:
Tags:
No TrackBacks
TrackBack URL: http://www.platts.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2352
RSS feed
Search This Blog
About this Entry
This entry was written by News Desk and was published on February 15, 2012 1:57 PM ET.
Previous entry: The hidden war Iran may wage on the oil market, according to Gary Sick
Next entry: The case for, of all things, MTBE
Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.
Twitter Updates
Categories
- Africa (26)
- Airlines (13)
- Arctic oil and gas (7)
- Asia (69)
- Carbon limits (13)
- Coal (4)
- Company doings (60)
- Drilling (11)
- Electricity (15)
- Emissions (36)
- Ethanol (40)
- Events (66)
- Finance (8)
- Gas (66)
- Global warming (53)
- Gulf of Mexico (58)
- Human health and environmental impacts (20)
- LNG (30)
- Latin America (17)
- Lists (7)
- Media (15)
- Methodology issues (3)
- Mexico (2)
- Middle East (37)
- OPEC (72)
- Oil fundamentals (389)
- Oil sands (23)
- Oil spills (27)
- Oilgram News columns (41)
- Peak oil (20)
- Petrochemicals (3)
- Platts analysis (78)
- Platts on television (23)
- Podcasts (4)
- Power Lines
- Power generation (17)
- Prices (164)
- Refining (46)
- Renewable energy (55)
- Shale gas (70)
- Shipping (32)
- Talent (30)
- Trading (35)
- US Morning Market Analysis
- Upstream (108)
- Washington watch (187)

Leave a comment