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IEA says more oil and gas investment may be needed

  • The forecast, along with its implications for pledges by some governments to reach carbon neutrality, have drawn ire of the oil and gas industry
Published September 16, 2025 Updated September 16, 2025 01:59pm
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

PARIS: New oil and gas projects may be necessary to maintain current production levels, the IEA said Tuesday, as it is in a public feud with the Trump administration over its forecasts for lower demand.

The International Energy Agency said in a report that its analysis of 15,000 oil and gas fields showed that output was declining more rapidly than in the past, which has “implications for markets and energy security”.

The Paris-based agency produces annual reports about energy trends and has forecasted that oil demand will peak by the end of the decade, which would have considerable implications for investment in further oil production.

The forecast, along with its implications for pledges by some governments to reach carbon neutrality, have drawn ire of the oil and gas industry.

The agency has also faced criticism over the past months from the administration of US president Donald Trump, with Energy Secretary Chris Wright threatening in July to pull out of the IEA if it did not reform how it operates.

While the IEA did not address its demand forecast, it said that faster rates of production decline in fields, related in part to development in less productive offshore fields and fracking, meant that investment needs must be reconsidered.

“Careful attention needs to be paid to the potential consequences for market balances, energy security and emissions,” IEA chief Fatih Birol said in a statement.

The IEA concluded that “keeping global oil and gas production constant over time would require the development of new resources”.

Even taking into account projects approved and under development, the IEA said there was “a large gap that would need to be filled by new conventional oil and gas projects to maintain production at current levels, although the amounts needed could be reduced if oil and gas demand were to come down”.

It said upstream oil and gas investment in 2025 was likely to come in at around $570 billion, which implies a small increase in production if it continues at that level.

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